-T1~- ,/STATE The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, November 17, 1999 - 7 Students use weekends By Tiffany Maggard much I have, and do take for grated," residents ofthe Taylor Home will be left Daily Staf Reporter Wubishet said. without homes. One group of University students Documentary Works members said Documentary Works interacts with have left campus most weekends this they hope to use the films to expose the home's children by encouraging semester, taking with them only a video other young adults to the reality that them to write poetry asa creative means camerae, their compassion and their socio-economic stratification than to express themselves and to enlighten doe to acknowledge the nation's most University students associate others about their community life. The di rse societal framework. with. group will use the poetry as a paradigm Where they travel is far removed The Chicago project is the group's through which the documentary will from the atmosphere in Ann Arbor. The very first attempt at achieving its goals. explain the level of poverty in the Taylor group lkraves the drug- and gang-infest- LSA senior Jennifer Yang describes Home. ed areaof a south Chicago housing pro- the Taylor Home in Chicago as a whole Yang said Documentary Works hopes ect, in an effort to raise socio-econom- different realm of living. that the poetry also will "give the chil- c awareness. "It's really just a different world - dren insight at a more artistic level - The group, Documentary.Works, has it's complete poverty. You can see that something to give them a greater sense seen Chicago bound each weekend the kids are so enthusiastic about learn- of perspective on language and the ince October to explore living condi- ing, but they just don't have the arts." ions in Chicago's Robert Taylor Home, resources they need," Yang said. But where Documentary Works tation's largest housing project.." Many children between the ages of members reach these children is not in rmversity alum Gizachew Wubishet eight and 15 take refuge in the Boys and the safe haven provided by the commu- md LSA junior Phillip Reese, formed Girls Program at the Taylor Home after nity center, but the Boys and Girls he student group earlier this year. school to escape the threat of gangs and Program. Their goal was to bring students from drugs that surround them. Itsis a place The students face gang members and il areas of the University together to where they can work on homework and drug pushers who they said govern the locument various ways of life via com- engage in constructive social and learn- activities that go on within their com- nunity service. This makes the project ing activities. pound and regulate all who enter and dual effort - to serve the community But this safe haven will not be around exist. Even police shy away from this nd to understand the variability of much longer. Wubishet said the environment, leaving gang members to ocio-economic stratification. Chicago Housing Authority is in the act as its only "guards,"Yang said. *st working with these kids in this process of demolishing the housing "Gang members rule the project - ommunity that is so far removed from project. Although the city's remodeling literally,"Yang said, "You can't go to the knn Arbor makes me realize just how will give it economic advantage, the community center after 5 p.m. - that's to make documentaiy when death sets in." These "guards," though intimidating as they may be, are some of Documentary Works' most important sources of information in their scrutiny of life in the projects. The students have formed respectable relationships with the gang members and drug dealers. The students have documented the lives of these members of the community and their concerns for the future - when they will be forced to give up what little they have now, for virtually nothing at all when the housing project is demolished. "The interests of these people needs to be recognized," said LSA senior Kristin Wright, a student working on the project. "We need to understand the urban experiences and gangs and how they co-exist in the ghetto and share this information with other people." The Taylor Home was built to com- pensate for the large poverty-stricken black population that emerged in Chicago in the 1960s and '70s, when the white middle-class moved in mass to the suburbs. Today, the area in Chicago's south side is a place of extreme poverty, Documentary Works members said. Many buildings are rat-infested, eleva- tors reek of urine and don't function, refrigerators are no bigger than those in most college housing and have no freezers. If maintenance problems arise, rarely does anyone show up to fix them because the housing project is too dan- gerous for outsiders. "There was a baby boy and a rat was literally eating his face," Yang said, "Even though the baby's mother was extremely neat and clean, there was a hole in their apartment and the rat got in and began eating his face where a piece of food had gotten stuck." Wubishet also recounted shocking images of poverty, far from what most University students have seen. "This community is ravaged," he said. "These kids are not growing up like most kids that go to the University of Michigan." Documentary Works hopes to com- plete its project by March. Eventually, they want to share their work with stu- dents at other universities and with high school students in metro Detroit. "I want to stress the importance of this project to social leaming'" Yang said. "It's so important to have a grasp of what's going on in society - our University has so much potential because of the diversity that we have. Hopefully this project will help people grow in their knowledge of society - that's a big part of our goal." Funding for Documentary Works project with the Taylor Home comes in part from the Michigan Student Assembly Community Service Commission. CSC Chair Michael Masters, an LSA junior, said the assem- bly was blown away by the amount of initiative, work and responsibility that Documentary Works has demonstrated with the Chicago project. "I'm completely blown away by the fact that these kids are out there every weekend in this area that is completely decrepit, just because they want to make a difference," Masters said. Speaking on behalf of the commis- sion, Masters said the efforts of those involved in Documentary Works will contribute both to the citizens who live in the project and to the individuals who are blind to this level of poverty. 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