Chattanooga Times Free Press

Baltimore peacemaker works on movement to stop bloodshed

- BY DAVID MCFADDEN

BALTIMORE — In an alley where a teenager became one of Baltimore’s latest bodies to fall, Erricka Bridgeford whispered prayers and directed smoke from burning sage in a gathering intended to transform spots where people are slain into sacred ground.

The spirituall­y minded activist began to cry, letting her tears fall on asphalt where the 17-year-old boy she didn’t know was fatally shot the night before. She called out “You matter! You matter!” in a raw voice that came from somewhere deep inside her 5-foot-2 frame.

Over the past year, the African-American woman from West Baltimore has become the city’s clearest voice calling for people to lay down their weapons. A profession­al conflict mediator, she’s the main organizer behind “Baltimore Ceasefire,” a citizen-led effort to reverse one of the worst homicide rates in the United States.

“You can get really overwhelme­d by the numbers. But if this city is going to heal, we’ll all have to do our best to start being better people from the inside,” said Bridgeford, 45, the public face behind the movement launched this past summer with the motto “Nobody kill anybody.”

Held in August, the first cease-fire weekend was marked by peaceful marches, cookouts, community events and pledges by gang members to refrain from violence. The event, advertised on social media and with posters in shop and

home windows, attracted internatio­nal attention — and was lauded even though it ended with two homicides that led cynics to belittle the effort. A second event was held last month.

Bridgeford hasn’t stopped there. Plans call for cease-fire weekends to be held four times a year, and she also leads near-nightly gatherings in the hope of transformi­ng homicide sites into places alive with meaning. But she’s hardly naive. Bridgeford knows firsthand how ingrained violence is in the city: Her brother, a stepson and three cousins have all died in shootings. When she was just 12, she saw a neighbor die from a gunshot.

Baltimore is not alone in its suffering; violent crime is up in a number of cities, including Chicago, St. Louis and Cleveland. What some researcher­s say sets Baltimore apart is a violent-crime rate that has returned to the high levels not seen since the early 1990s, when U.S. cities grappled with a nationwide crack cocaine epidemic.

In fact, with 2017 not quite over, Baltimore already has set a city record for killings per capita, with roughly 56 slayings per 100,000 people. The highest overall annual total was 353 slayings per 100,000 people in 1993, when Baltimore was home to more than 700,000 residents. The city is currently home to 615,000.

Bridgeford’s anti-violence efforts haven’t been able to stop the deaths, per se, but they have made residents think about their city’s slayings as something more than grim statistics.

One of the major aims of her quest is to humanize the victims, most of whom are young black men from neighborho­ods awash in drugs and marked by crumbling housing, a scarcity of decent opportunit­ies and deep inequality.

Lisa Miller, a professor at Rutgers University who has studied anti-crime politics for more than 20 years, said the work of black community organizers like Bridgeford has too often gone unnoticed.

She said a flawed narrative that black citizens aren’t doing anything to reduce violence can feed into a persistent view of too many white Americans that the conditions of generation­al poverty in which many African-Americans live is entirely within their control.

“This racist narrative remains alive and well, unfortunat­ely. It defies empirical reality in every sense and is not hard to debunk, which tells you something about its durability,” Miller said.

In late October, Sharkey published research in the American Sociologic­al Associatio­n journal that suggests grassroots groups may become increasing­ly central to efforts to control violence within communitie­s vulnerable to crime spikes.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Erricka Bridgeford burns sage earlier this month as she performs a ceremony near the scene of a Baltimore homicide.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Erricka Bridgeford burns sage earlier this month as she performs a ceremony near the scene of a Baltimore homicide.

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