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Why the Music Stopped

This is the story of Ricky, a victim of a bad neighborhood in south Texas. His story plays out in Hispanic barrios across the U.S. His story is real; the names are not.

By Mayra Rodríguez Valladares - Ricky was a thin 13-year old kid with incredibly straight jet-black hair and very mischievous eyes. Teresa remembers him “as a C student the whole time he was in junior high.” Yet, Ricky was also a very good clarinet player. He would sit on the gravel in front of a neighbor’s house and play the school-borrowed instrument for hours. The woman’s two huge German shepherds would stop their barking and whimpering when Ricky would serenade them most evenings. Even Teresa, who had better grades, was a little envious. “How could such a bad student be such a good clarinet player?” she would ask herself.

“¡Ricky, ven a comer!” his mother would shout. And just like that, the beginner’s level of Mozart’s clarinet concerto would stop abruptly and Ricky’s lanky legs would carry him off. He would always try to eat with his mother and sister. The father had been absent all of Ricky’s life and one of his brothers had been in jail longer than Ricky could remember.

Weapon-Carrying students in High School
Percentage of students grades 9-12 carrying a weapon in the past 30 days:
 
non-Hispanic whites
Hispanics
male
28.6
29.5
female
1.4
3.6

source: IUPLR

Teresa’s and the dogs’ ears, for that matter, would be left wanting for more of those comforting clarinet sounds that momentarily would almost cover up the barrio’s sounds: the fights, crying children, and police car sirens.

Suddenly one day, no one heard Ricky play again, nor did anyone see him running to and from home. Rumor had it that he had been in a fight with some teenage drug dealers. A shot in the back confined him to a wheel chair the rest of his life. No one in the barrio was ever willing to testify as to who had shot him. Ricky had become very depressed and did not want anyone seeing him in a wheelchair. He dropped out of school and refused to receive any special tutoring or to go to a special school.

If Ricky’s tragic story were a rare exception in the Hispanic community, it would be easier to walk away. Ricky was a victim of circumstances. His mother worked hard to make ends meet. He was left alone and unsupervised too frequently.

Unfortunately, examples of other Rickys abound in the Hispanic community. Many Hispanic students come from broken homes or homes where parents are working endless hours to make ends meet. They are seldom home when classes end in the afternoon. And they are left unsupervised for long and dangerous hours from 3 to 6 p.m., when many teen crimes are committed.

By the time parents, counselors or teachers realize that the students are falling behind or are in trouble, it is almost impossible to steer them back onto the right course.

When students have a lot of unsupervised free time, they fall easily into temptations that can ensnare children and teenagers forever. Some turn to drugs for the seemingly easy money or because of peer pressure. Others get mired in violence due to drugs or because that is what they see at home. And still others get pregnant because of lack of sex education or because they want to have children in the hopes of receiving unconditional love.

One of the biggest problems that influence young Hispanic students to drop out of school is their involvement in taking or selling drugs or facilitating deals for drug dealers.

According to Inter-University Program for Hispanic Research (IUPLR), a nationwide research organization, 15 percent of Hispanic eighth graders had used illicit drugs in the 30 days prior to being interviewed. By 12th grade, 27 percent of Hispanic students had used drugs.

Violence often follows. It is often drug-related activities, and is not limited to the neighborhood where the teens live. Teresa, a petite and bookish girl, remembers riding the same school bus that Ricky used to ride to the nearby junior high school. One day, through a cloud of marijuana smoke, she saw that two teenagers were fighting each other; some later said it was over drugs, others said it was due to jealousy over a girl. When the bus arrived at the school, a group of kids fell out the door, some fighting and others just egging on the fighters. Eventually, principals, teachers and older boys disbanded the mob.

Why the Music Stopped, continue

Community Involvement

Eva Maldonado is not only a vibrant and energetic woman, president of the Stamford, Connecticut, Chamber of Commerce and a policewoman. She is also a dedicated member of the Hispanic community who spends a lot of her time trying to rescue at-risk Hispanic teens. Through her work as a police officer and as a civic volunteer, she sees first-hand the many problems besieging Hispanic youth. Teen pregnancies and drug-related violence are the two top enemies of any attempt to try to improve the education of young Hispanics.

“The problems that I encounter are separated by gender,” says Maldonado. “For example, the girls are involved in unprotected sex (which is another problem in itself), and they are getting pregnant at an earlier age.” When she speaks to young Hispanic girls, Maldonado gets the sense that “they are having sex just to be accepted.” Many do not quite understand the enormous responsibility of a baby, and often times once the baby arrives there is an end to any thought about school. “The boys then behave like they are on the track team,” she says. “They run far away from their responsibility, yet go to another girl; and the pattern continues.”

Maldonado also gets to see first-hand how many Hispanic boys are involved in drugs and violence. “They often start with a little drinking then proceed with smoking marijuana. They always think that they are in control … that they could always function.” However, these small problems usually lead to other bigger problems such as dropping out, crimes and violence.

Maldonado’s experiences have led her to support two community organizations that try to rescue young Hispanics. One organization is called SAVE (Students Against Violence Everywhere). The organization tries to set up peer mediators who then try to get the teens to work out their problems on their own. “The No. 1 complaint of young people is that no one understands them,” observes Maldonado. “By allowing them to speak out on issues that they believe to be true, they become stronger and get confidence in dealing with their problems. “Maldonado encourages positive “peer to peer empowerment.”

The group has been successful because Hispanic youth are involved in a “hands-on manner.” Maldonado has found that the students “are harder on themselves when they fail.”

The second organization is RAICES. This group was formed by young people with a clear and defined objective: undertaking community service projects in which Hispanic culture is the focus. “Our current project is to create a directory of Quién es Quién (Who’s Who) [for the Hispanic community]. In our community there are many hidden treasures,” Maldonado adds.

RAICES also tries to teach skills such as writing, photographing, interviewing, and some selling and marketing. Maldonado says that RAICES also helps teenagers “uncover role models and be encouraged by the struggles” of others like them who have been successful. “The ultimate objective is to have these hidden treasures give back to our young people,” Maldonado says. “The success of the project depends on the entire community. “

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