Tuesday, March 14, 2006

For Carlos

If I had first seen Carlos standing on the street corner with his baggy jeans and shaved head, I probably would have registered him as a dangerous person. I would have averted my eyes, held my bag closer to my side, kept my head down. Fortunately, I did not first meet him there. Instead, I met him in my first class, and in trying to be a good teacher, I worked at suspending those assumptions.

He seemed older than the other students and this fact turned out to be true. He was sixteen and in the ninth grade. He explained to me that he had not failed a grade. Instead, his immigration status kept him from enrolling in high school at the same grade level as the other students his age. He was tall, with broad shoulders and a round face. His skin was tawny and reddish and he had freckles speckled over his nose and face. His hair, a slight stubble spread over his skull, was also of a reddish tint. His eyes were a dark brown, and he walked slowly, his head held high.

On the first day of school, I struggled into the room carrying a box full of math books. I plopped them to the ground and asked for help to put them away. He volunteered immediately and brought in other boys to help. He had that quality. Other students listened to him. And I liked Carlos immediately.

Of course, at that time, I didn’t know anything about gangs. I thought the media and nervous teachers, who saw the bad in the students before they saw the good, over-amplified the whole gang situation. I didn’t recognize the signs. I imagined gang members to be older than the 9th graders I worked with. They had to be. My students seemed so young and naïve. And after all, just because they were black and Hispanic and lived in the South Bronx didn’t mean they were criminals.

Carlos was quickly moved out of my class and into an ESL class where he flourished. Busy with other matters, other students, I barely noticed a growing layer of beads around his neck, a symbol of gang life. One band of necklaces was earned after each apparent act. The first string of beads is earned when you are “jumped in” or initiated by a beating. I can only imagine what subsequent beads are earned for.

The following September Carlos was in the tenth grade. He was not in any of my classes, but I frequently saw him around campus. One day I saw him standing looking melancholy outside the principal’s office. He was often in trouble, and was frequently suspended. More and more fights were in the hallways. He was a regular figure, if not in the fights, in the dealings behind them.

“Are you waiting to talk to the principal?” I asked.

He shrugged. “I guess so.”

“What happened? This isn’t like you.”

“Miss,” he began, shaking his head. ”You don’t know. I just want to pass math.”

I was puzzled. “What do you mean? What does that have to do with your fight?”

“That kid. He never shuts up. I can’t think in that class.”

“Is it a rough class?”

He sucked his teeth and shook his head. “Nobody can do their work. They never listen to the teacher. I just want to pass this class.”

“You’re not going to pass if you keep getting into fights. Who started it?”

“I told him to shut up. He didn’t like that so we took it outside.”

“You can’t solve your problems like this.” Did I actually believe that?

“You don’t know how it is, Miss. This here is the way things are.”

I went to the counselor to see if he could get transferred to another school. I certainly wasn’t the only teacher to take up his cause; most teachers who knew him saw the goodness in him that I saw. He was intelligent, talented, compassionate. I often talked to him about writing, as he considered himself to be a poet, like his rap idol, Tupac Shakur. The counselor was intimate with the details of his case, and was certain he could not be transferred. Seventeen, a gang member, an absent parent, a file in the dean’s office two inches thick. Of course he could never get a transfer.

Carlos suffered through several suspensions that year--some deserved, some not. He gained a reputation with the principal and other administrators that he was undesirable, a negative impact on the other students. “He is a gang member,” they’d say, as if that alone was enough incriminating evidence to have him kept away from their school.

And he was a gang member, a part of the Bronx “Bloods.” But this alone was difficult for me to take seriously. These “gang members” wear red bandanas and enjoy the privilege of being protected from one another. The gang members that I know are usually shorter than me, experienced in petty crimes, obsessed with ordinary high school gossip, but rarely any real trouble in class. Few know how to read or write, at least not well enough to have any power outside of their own neighborhood. Most are like Carlos, unfailingly polite, on their own in the world, and utterly lost. Sometimes I try to imagine them in other New York neighborhoods. On the street corners of the Bronx they may be feared, but if transported to Union Square or Wall Street, they would be small kids dressed thuggishly, like some inner city cartoon.

The last time I saw Carlos was in September. He was back in school, and he seemed fine. Everything was quiet in our hallways. Even gang activity seemed to be still. We were hopeful, like you should be at the beginning of a school year.

On September 17, 2005, Carlos shot a rival gang member and a ten-year-old girl who was walking next to him. I have to preface this by saying he was never arrested, he was never tried in court or found guilty. I didn’t see him do it. But the students, the teachers, the administrators, the police, the word on the street all feel it. We feel it to be true. The gang member was shot in the hip and shoulder. The girl was sped to a nearby hospital where she spent a very long recovery.

The principal held a meeting and told us about the incident. “One of our students shot someone,” he said.

“Allegedly shot someone,” a young teacher reminded him.

Allegedly.

And I immediately thought to myself, his life is over. If Carlos did it his life is over. If he didn’t--his life is still over. The police were after him now, and the gangster thugs would be looking for him too. I also knew Carlos well enough to assume that even if he felt little remorse for the shooting of the 19-year-old rival gang member, he would feel something about that little girl. He couldn’t live with that, could he?

“If anyone sees him,” the principal continued. “They should let us know right away.”

We never saw Carlos again.

He remained at large until he was shot to death on December 30th. He was killed by five shots on the basketball court near an inner city housing project. According to the New York Times, two youths wearing red bandanas fled the scene.

I guess it would be easy for me to moralize about the danger of gangs, but that isn’t what I want to do. I want to just remember Carlos, and not pretend he is so different from me, or the kids I grew up with, or the other kids I teach now. I want to remember him in his new school clothes, baggy jeans, and bright polo shirts. Forever he will sit in my first classroom with his fresh notebook, thoughtfully poised to discuss literature. Because even murderers were innocent at one time.

8 Comments:

At 2:39 PM , Blogger NYC Educator said...

This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

 
At 2:41 PM , Blogger NYC Educator said...

Awfully sad story, but very well-written.

Maybe you could publish this elsewhere.

 
At 4:50 AM , Blogger no_slappz said...

You're first impression of Carlos was on the nose. He was a walking advertizement for himself in his baggy jeans and shaved head.

A key lesson here, and there are many, is that looks aren't deceiving, but neither are looks comprehensive.

Carlos may have been a gang-banger on his way to becoming a killer, and no doubt would have fulfilled his destiny had some other gang-bangers not cut short his passage.

However, he was not wholly evil. Nobody is. Neither is anyone wholly good.

You connected with that part of him that occasionally emerged and took temporary precedence over his murderous side.

You even stated you refused to believe your own eyes or what experience had taught you. Why?

Carlos was a sociopath and he knew you were easily duped. He played you even if he did so unconsciously. But you understood he was a sociopath when you acknowledged he feel no remorse for shooting a rival gang-member. But I think you're wrong about his feelings for the innocent bystander he also shot. He wouldn't think much about her either. Remorse? Not a chance.

He admired Tupac Shakur, a glorifier of violence, death and anti-social behavior. Was this idolization of a murdered rapper not troubling? Shakur, like almost all rappers, was a poor lyricist. But he succeeded because the intensity of his hate overcame the shortcomings of his writing.

Then you tried to shift the blame for Carlos' difficulties in school to an uncaring administration. You showed distress over the principal's that Carlos was a lost cause.

But the principal was right. He was a gang member and beyond redemption.

Carlos should have been booted from school long before he left with the police in pursuit. However, he was kept in the school system where his most notable contributions boiled down to his capacity for fighting and disorder.

His clothes foretold his story. He was an illustrated boy whose violent demise was expected.

 
At 3:01 PM , Blogger Candyce said...

I don't beleive that Carlos was a sociopath. Thank you for your comments.

 
At 1:23 PM , Blogger no_slappz said...

miss building:

If a person who fights regularly as he moves along a path of increasing violence that leads him to shoot two people and eventually to die when he is executed in a gunfight by enemies is not a sociopath, who is?

Though Carlos may not have been an unfeeling killing machine, he practiced enough anti-social behavior to bear the sociopath label.

 
At 4:50 PM , Blogger Miss Edukat said...

"But the principal was right. He was a gang member and beyond redemption."

"Beyond Redemption" at 17? The administration did nothing to help this kid. Many teachers and staff appealed both verbally and in writing to get this student some help.
I agree with Mrs. B, Carlos was not a sociopath nor do I think she was taken in by him. Individuals who are "sociopathic" in nature have no moral remorse nor do they have guilt. Many individuals admire Tupac for variety of reasons other than gang banging. Besides Tupac never murdered anyone, he was arrested on other charges. Please note Tupac was murdered.

 
At 1:44 PM , Blogger Candyce said...

Right on Miss Edukat!

 
At 6:37 PM , Blogger Pissedoffteacher said...

I'm glad there are teacher sout there like you who can see the good in troubled students. If more teachers were like you, perhaps Carlos would be alive today and the little girl would not be facing this difficult recovery.

 

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