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- <text id=93TT1428>
- <title>
- Apr. 12, 1993: Out Of The Ashes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 12, 1993 The Info Highway
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CITIES, Page 46
- Out Of The Ashes
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Twenty-five years after the devastating riot, a poor Washington
- family wins the struggle to save their home
- </p>
- <p>By JACK E. WHITE/WASHINGTON
- </p>
- <p> When Martin Luther King Jr. was killed 25 years ago this
- week, black Washington exploded. Angry mobs surged through the
- streets exacting a terrible revenge for the slain civil rights
- leader. Before federal troops quelled the violence, 11 people
- died, hundreds of businesses were destroyed and countless
- thousands of lives were torn apart.
- </p>
- <p> Among those caught up in the storm was Katherine
- Washington. Though she was only an innocent and terrified
- bystander during the upheaval, 25 years later it still affects
- her life and the lives of her children. What sets Katherine
- apart from most low-income blacks is that a long odyssey she
- began amid the smoke and flames of the riot will soon reach a
- triumphant conclusion. She owes her good fortune to a
- combination of factors that are in short supply in the inner
- city: strong family ties; steady work, although for low wages;
- and help from both the government and innovative community
- organizations. Without any one of those, the result would
- probably have been tragedy, as it has been for so many others.
- </p>
- <p> Before the riot, the poor could at least gain a toehold in
- neighborhoods like the one at 14th and U streets in Northwest
- Washington, where the violence began. Though the district had
- faded badly from its heyday in the 1940s, when it ranked among
- the most vibrant black communities in the nation, it still had
- movie theaters, nightclubs and scores of thriving businesses.
- True, schools were slipping, crime was getting worse and some
- of the more affluent residents had moved away. But most of the
- area's hardworking families had no intention of abandoning one
- of the few relatively decent places in racially divided
- Washington that blacks could call their own.
- </p>
- <p> For Katherine, moving into the 14th and U area would have
- been a step up. A 10th-grade dropout with four children and no
- husband, she lived in a nearby but more crime-ridden
- neighborhood. She was waiting tables at a restaurant on Seventh
- Street, in a busy black commercial section, when she heard about
- the trouble at 14th and U. A glance at the street confirmed that
- the violence had already spread. People were breaking windows,
- and flames leaped from a building not far away. Shaking with
- fear, Katherine raced to her apartment, where she was horrified
- to discover that the tavern right next door had been set on
- fire. As sirens wailed and wisps of tear gas tainted the air,
- she bundled up the children and made her way through the
- gathering chaos to the home of relatives in a safer
- neighborhood.
- </p>
- <p> When she returned to her apartment the next day, the
- tavern had been reduced to a smoldering relic. She resolved then
- and there to find a safer abode. She could afford little on her
- meager wages, but found an apartment on Euclid Street. Though it
- was only blocks away from the place she had fled, the quiet
- block, mostly occupied by working-class black families, seemed
- like a different world. She has been there ever since.
- </p>
- <p> Katherine's flight to Euclid Street was part of a larger
- exodus of both people and businesses as a cloud of almost
- palpable gloom settled over the city. Katherine was one of those
- suffering from the psychological aftershock. Walking past the
- eerie hulks of burnt-out buildings to get to her job made her
- nervous. Even worse, she had come to fear the drug addicts and
- petty criminals who frequented the restaurant; many of them had
- taken part in the destruction and seemed to have become less
- law-abiding as a result. One night, after a customer was shot
- to death by a police officer while Katherine looked on in
- horror, she quit her job and went on welfare.
- </p>
- <p> Businessmen brave or foolhardy enough to try rebuilding in
- the riot corridors met with one failure after another. Even
- before the rubble was cleared away, John Snipes opened a
- custom-shirt shop on U Street to cater to snappy dressers in the
- neighborhood. It quickly faded in the area's dreary economic
- climate. "You couldn't get insurance. You couldn't get credit.
- You just couldn't get anything," says Snipes. "You'd look around
- and see all these empty buildings, all this devastation and that
- put a damper on us." Since then, Snipes has tried two other
- enterprises, a blue-jeans shop and a convenience store. Both
- have gone out of business.
- </p>
- <p> Katherine's experience on welfare threatened to push her
- down into a spiral of dependency and hopelessness. But she did
- not surrender. "I refused to give in because I had children who
- were dependent on me and I couldn't let them down," she says.
- "It was really a struggle, but I always believed in God and I
- knew that whatever means it took for me to survive, beyond
- violence, I would survive. As long as you had a job, you could
- make it." Eventually, she got one at a Woolworth variety store,
- where she still works as a clerk.
- </p>
- <p> Katherine had two things going for her besides pride: a
- long-term relationship with Leroy Bennett, the father of most
- of her children; and the support of her strong-willed cousin
- Nancy Bryant, who lived next door with her own large family.
- That meant that an adult was usually available to supervise the
- kids, an increasingly urgent task during the 1980s, when drug
- sellers began working Euclid Street.
- </p>
- <p> Fortunately, the dealers were mostly neighborhood youths
- Katherine and Nancy had known since they were children. When the
- peddlers set up an open-air drug market on the street corner,
- Katherine and Nancy shooed them away. The women's efforts to
- keep their children out of trouble, however, were not entirely
- successful. Just three weeks ago, Nancy's 16-year-old son was
- wounded in the leg when shooting broke out at a dance.
- Katherine's daughter Teresa gave birth to a daughter Janai out
- of wedlock five years ago. But showing the determination she got
- from her mother, Teresa works full-time in a food-service job
- while studying to be an accountant.
- </p>
- <p> In 1990 a crisis threatened to undo everything Nancy,
- Teresa and Katherine had done to keep their families together.
- Their landlord had decided to sell the cluster of row houses
- they lived in, and any new owner was likely to evict them so
- that the properties could be renovated and rented at a higher
- rate. City law requires that tenants be granted a first shot at
- buying their apartments. But to Katherine the sum required--$190,000--was daunting. "For people like us, there was no way
- we could come up with that."
- </p>
- <p> For once, Katherine seemed defeated, but Nancy vowed to
- fight. "I was determined that whatever it took we were going to
- stay here," says Nancy. She found an ally at Washington
- Innercity Self Help, a nonprofit organization that helps
- low-income people buy their own homes. With advice from WISH,
- they set up the Malcolm X Court Cooperative Association to take
- over two adjoining row houses containing six apartments,
- assuming they could come up with the money. Nancy became its
- president.
- </p>
- <p> While WISH searched for major sources of funding, the
- women scrambled to raise $1,000 each to use as downpayments
- before the Dec. 31, 1991, deadline for buying the buildings
- expired. They badgered neighbors and friends for donations, sold
- Christmas cards and organized an excursion to Atlantic City.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, WISH put together a complex finance scheme to
- buy and refurbish the buildings using funds from a local
- government agency, Washington's New Columbia Community Land
- Trust and the Massachusetts-based Institute for Community
- Economics. The total cost: $500,000. The deal was closed two
- days after Christmas in 1991. Said Katherine: "Thank you,
- Jesus."
- </p>
- <p> The Federal Government's Section 8 housing program will
- subsidize the mortgage payments so that Nancy, Katherine and
- Teresa will only have to pay 30% of their monthly income--whatever that may be--toward paying back the loans. Work at
- the building is now nearly complete, and the families will move
- into their new homes in May. "The best thing about them is that
- they're brand new and they're ours," says Teresa.
- </p>
- <p> Many others have not fared so well. Despite numerous
- promises from the district's government, the section around 14th
- and U remains a disaster area. A city office complex has been
- built on the corner where the uprising started, and there is a
- new subway station just a block away. Nevertheless, few of the
- businesses that were burned out have been replaced, and many
- residents have given up hope they ever will be. Almost everyone
- with the means to escape has fled, leaving behind mostly those
- too poor or broken in spirit to make a difference in the
- neighborhood's fortunes. Says lawyer Stanley Mayes, one of the
- few middle-class blacks who still live there: "In some ways the
- riot was the demise of this community. People who had lived here
- for generations suddenly saw themselves as `residents of the
- ghetto,' words they had never used about themselves. They began
- to feel that the neighborhood was expendable. They got about the
- business of moving up and moving out."
- </p>
- <p> Yet if all goes well for Katherine, she plans to live on
- nearby Euclid Street for the rest of her life. While it is
- perilous to draw broad conclusions from a single example, some
- lessons from her story seem unassailable. One is that with
- enough grit and the aid of private and government organizations
- that are willing to invest in them, the poor can rise above the
- most adverse circumstances. The other is that in Washington and
- elsewhere, there is not enough of either commodity to fulfill
- the need. If there were, the aftermath of the city's riots would
- not be such an epic tale of suffering.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-