China Daily

US circus squad aims to keep inner city teens off the streets

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TRENTON, New Jersey — A group of would-be circus performers in New Jersey’s capital city are using unicycles, acrobatics and spinning plates to bridge the divide between poverty and privilege.

The Trenton Circus Squad brings children from ages 12 to 17 from both the struggling city and its wealthier suburbs together, using circus skills to give them a sense of belonging and a belief in their own abilities.

While teaching young people to be the ring masters of their own lives, the children also work on balancing on large balls and wooden plan ks, stilt-walking, trapeze skills, juggling and slapstick clown routines.

“Because of the high crime, the high unemployme­nt going on here, hope’s hard to find in this city,” says program director Tom von Oehsen, who trained as a clown with Ringling Bros in the 1980s. “And these kids bring a lot of hope, and a lot of positive energy to all the different communitie­s in this city.”

Von Oehsen and Zoe Brookes, the group’s executive director, created the circus squad two years ago to try to change perception­s and stereotype­s that lead to negative assumption­s about teens in inner cities.

Von Oehsen calls it a “game changer” that other cities can embrace to engage inner city youth and keep them off the streets. Brookes says they give the children “a really safe place to test their limits and help them do things they never thought were possible”.

“The kids in the program really become role models,” Brookes says. “And we bring in people from many other towns really to change their perspectiv­e on what Trenton has to offer, and what the kids in Trenton have to offer the community.”

The group, which plans to start a pilot program in Camden this summer, performs at nursing homes, hospitals and community events.

While it started as a service project for suburban high school students to fulfill their community service requiremen­t for graduation, the kids kept coming back even after they completed their hours.

Squad members say they enjoy meeting kids from different background­s, knowing that they share some of the same concerns.

Gabbie Cain is a 16-year-old squad member from nearby Princeton.

“I feel like I connect on some basis, but I’ve never been exposed to the living that some people here experience,” Cain says. “So, I’ve learned a lot just by coming here.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Teenagers work on acrobatic acts like balancing and juggling during a workshop at the Trenton Circus Squad.
PHOTOS BY ASSOCIATED PRESS Teenagers work on acrobatic acts like balancing and juggling during a workshop at the Trenton Circus Squad.
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