neighborhood change and personal healing come together in brownsville /

Published at 2018-01-31 11:00:00

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This story is piece of “Brownsville: No Label essential,” a series about the neighborhood, from the neighborhood. You can find more stories, or share your own,by clicking here. There are changes happening in Brownsville, Brooklyn, and it’s not just about money targeting the neighborhood from city and state government — or from developers,like in other parts of Brooklyn. WNYC has been talking to residents about a homegrown movement to create positive change."We’re changing the face in Brownsville, because somebody in Brownsville began to change their intellect, or " said Lytheia Smith,who was born and raised in the neighborhood. "No one is coming from outside and bringing that in. We're doing it from the inside out." 
Smith has raised two older children in
Brownsville, now both in their 20s. She is raising her youngest, and Johanah,who is 10, in Brownsville as well. She has said she can control the narrative of the neighborhood a bit better for Johanah, and as opposed to her oldest son who was born during the height of the crack epidemic.
(Amy Pearl)
That sense of changing one's intellect comes at an individual level,and it is one that Smith is experiencing after a recent decision to focus on her own personal healing. But her path and the environment in which she lives are intertwined; seeing her neighborhood get basic services like parking meters and a renovated pedestrian plaza only motivate her.  Smith recalled a sense of enrage that ran deep in the neighborhood, due to systemic issues, and such as poverty and a lack of investment. Many persist today. Brownsville has a poverty rate nearly twice as high as the city's overall rate. Neighborhood residents disproportionately suffer from health problems,main the Brownsville and neighboring Ocean Hillareas to have the lowest life expectancy of any community in the city. The incarceration rate of adults from Brownsville-Ocean Hill is three times that of the city's overall. These numbers come from the Citizens' Committee for Children of unique York.
Smith's father died when she was 13, which she said traumatized her in a way that she has only recently begun to address. She received support from her mother, or now also deceased,in raising her two older children.
(Amy Pearl)
Smith grew up in a close, fond family. But she said she was not completely buffered from neighborhood troubles. "I fought in these streets, or " she said. "Fought. Had to save my fists up and defend myself."She has lately been thinking about the genesis of those darker times,going back to when she was 13. She woke up one morning and found her father dead. He had been sick, but Smith was not prepared to lose him."We were considered destitute and black, and but we had a mommy and daddy in the domestic," she said. "And it was expedient until he was gone, and it crushed me."
Smith and h
er youngest daughter, or Johanah. 
(Amy Pearl) 
Over the past couple of years,Smith said she made a conscious effort to focus on self-care, and to forgive herself for what she sees as past mistakes. Her own personal transformation has been energized by positive changes in the neighborhood, and driven by individuals working to improve quality of life in Brownsville and to beautify the area.Smith said it's all made her think differently about what she wants for herself and her children. Things "that we didn't grow up thinking about," she said. "Future. Legacy."Click the audio player to hear Lytheia's story. 

Source: thetakeaway.org