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Father absence "decimates" black community in U.S.

CHICAGO Thu Jun 14, 2007 7:23am EDT

 
Chris Gardner, whose life the movie is based on, attends the world premiere of 'The Pursuit of Happyness' at the Mann Village theater in Westwood, California in this December 7, 2006 file photo. For Gardner fatherhood is the greatest job in the world. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni

Chris Gardner, whose life the movie is based on, attends the world premiere of 'The Pursuit of Happyness' at the Mann Village theater in Westwood, California in this December 7, 2006 file photo. For Gardner fatherhood is the greatest job in the world. 

CREDIT: REUTERS/MARIO ANZUONI

 
 
 
 
 
 

RELATED TOPICS

 
 
 

(Reuters) - For Chris Gardner, who was played by Will Smith in the movie "The Pursuit of Happyness," fatherhood is the greatest job in the world.

"There's no pay. There are no benefits. You don't get time off. You don't get a break," he said. "But once in a while you get to see your child shine and you say to yourself, 'That's my boy. That's my girl.'"

It is also a job that Gardner and others believe is increasingly in trouble in the United States, even as the country gives its annual Fathers Day salute on June 17.

More than 19 million children -- about one in four -- were living in households where no father, biological or other, was present, according to a Census Bureau report in 2005.

The statistics also show that this burden falls more heavily on black children. Some 56 percent of black children lived in single-parent families in 2004, with most of those families headed by mothers. That figure compared with 22 percent of white children and 31 percent of Hispanic children.

"Father absence in the African American communities, across America, has hit those communities with the force of 100 hurricane Katrinas," said Phillip Jackson, executive director of the Chicago-based Black Star Project, which helps children in mainly minority schools.

"It is literally decimating our communities and we have no adequate response to it."

Among those who grew up without a father is Gardner, the subject of the movie "The Pursuit of Happyness." The movie tells how he struggles with homelessness and raising a child while trying to pursue a new career as a stockbroker in training.

Gardner is now the millionaire head of investment firm Gardner Rich & Co. and a motivational speaker.

For groups like the Black Star Project, the focus is on education, sponsoring activities such as getting fathers to walk to school with their children on the first day of classes each year.

Last year an estimated 300,000 men in 127 cities participated that first day of school effort called the "Million Father March" and this year the group hopes to see nearly half a million men in 200 communities.

"The children start thinking, 'Wow, my father is here. This thing called education, this must really be important because my father took the time off to come up here'," Jackson said.

Jackson said it has taken decades for fathering to decline to its current state, and restoring it would be a long process.

"We're not going to wake up tomorrow or next year and say 'Voila! We're back to where we were,'" he said.

In 2006, the National Fatherhood Initiative in Gaithersburg, Maryland commissioned the University of Texas at Austin to conduct a survey of 701 fathers called "Pop's Culture: A National Survey of Dads' Attitudes on Fathering."

It found that 91 percent of those questioned agreed there is a father-absence crisis in America. They listed work demands as the No. 1 barrier to being a good father. Other major impediments included the media and popular culture followed by financial problems.

Fathers who were not married to the mother of their children cited a lack of cooperation from mothers as the chief obstacle to being a good father, followed by work responsibilities, financial problems and treatment of fathers by the courts.

Roland Warren, president of the National Fatherhood Initiative, said that children in fatherless households are more susceptible to life's challenges.

"They are two to three times more likely to use drugs, become teen parents, be connected with the criminal justice system, to fail in school or to live in poverty," he said.

Gardner credits his uncles with being positive male figures in his life.

"I had a very abusive stepfather. I made a decision at 5 years-old that when I became a man and had children no one would ever talk to my children, treat or terrorize them as I was," he said in an interview.

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Originally Posted by yuji22:

 

Father absence "decimates" black community in U.S.

CHICAGO Thu Jun 14, 2007 7:23am EDT

 
Chris Gardner, whose life the movie is based on, attends the world premiere of 'The Pursuit of Happyness' at the Mann Village theater in Westwood, California in this December 7, 2006 file photo. For Gardner fatherhood is the greatest job in the world. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni

Chris Gardner, whose life the movie is based on, attends the world premiere of 'The Pursuit of Happyness' at the Mann Village theater in Westwood, California in this December 7, 2006 file photo. For Gardner fatherhood is the greatest job in the world. 

CREDIT: REUTERS/MARIO ANZUONI

 
 
 
 
 
 

RELATED TOPICS

 
 
 

(Reuters) - For Chris Gardner, who was played by Will Smith in the movie "The Pursuit of Happyness," fatherhood is the greatest job in the world.

"There's no pay. There are no benefits. You don't get time off. You don't get a break," he said. "But once in a while you get to see your child shine and you say to yourself, 'That's my boy. That's my girl.'"

It is also a job that Gardner and others believe is increasingly in trouble in the United States, even as the country gives its annual Fathers Day salute on June 17.

More than 19 million children -- about one in four -- were living in households where no father, biological or other, was present, according to a Census Bureau report in 2005.

The statistics also show that this burden falls more heavily on black children. Some 56 percent of black children lived in single-parent families in 2004, with most of those families headed by mothers. That figure compared with 22 percent of white children and 31 percent of Hispanic children.

"Father absence in the African American communities, across America, has hit those communities with the force of 100 hurricane Katrinas," said Phillip Jackson, executive director of the Chicago-based Black Star Project, which helps children in mainly minority schools.

"It is literally decimating our communities and we have no adequate response to it."

Among those who grew up without a father is Gardner, the subject of the movie "The Pursuit of Happyness." The movie tells how he struggles with homelessness and raising a child while trying to pursue a new career as a stockbroker in training.

Gardner is now the millionaire head of investment firm Gardner Rich & Co. and a motivational speaker.

For groups like the Black Star Project, the focus is on education, sponsoring activities such as getting fathers to walk to school with their children on the first day of classes each year.

Last year an estimated 300,000 men in 127 cities participated that first day of school effort called the "Million Father March" and this year the group hopes to see nearly half a million men in 200 communities.

"The children start thinking, 'Wow, my father is here. This thing called education, this must really be important because my father took the time off to come up here'," Jackson said.

Jackson said it has taken decades for fathering to decline to its current state, and restoring it would be a long process.

"We're not going to wake up tomorrow or next year and say 'Voila! We're back to where we were,'" he said.

In 2006, the National Fatherhood Initiative in Gaithersburg, Maryland commissioned the University of Texas at Austin to conduct a survey of 701 fathers called "Pop's Culture: A National Survey of Dads' Attitudes on Fathering."

It found that 91 percent of those questioned agreed there is a father-absence crisis in America. They listed work demands as the No. 1 barrier to being a good father. Other major impediments included the media and popular culture followed by financial problems.

Fathers who were not married to the mother of their children cited a lack of cooperation from mothers as the chief obstacle to being a good father, followed by work responsibilities, financial problems and treatment of fathers by the courts.

Roland Warren, president of the National Fatherhood Initiative, said that children in fatherless households are more susceptible to life's challenges.

"They are two to three times more likely to use drugs, become teen parents, be connected with the criminal justice system, to fail in school or to live in poverty," he said.

Gardner credits his uncles with being positive male figures in his life.

"I had a very abusive stepfather. I made a decision at 5 years-old that when I became a man and had children no one would ever talk to my children, treat or terrorize them as I was," he said in an interview.

this article is 8 years old; not breaking any new ground here

 

you don't give a shit about Black people in America. . . what's your angle?

 

[no need to answer, it likely has something to do with PPP race politics and upcoming elections in Guyana]

FM

What a stupid and again bigoted statement. Black fathers are more in the lives of their children than most other races. That is not myth but fact. What decimates black communities is institutional racism and the kind like yours that prefers to think itself superior when in fact it is parasitic on black success. With out black folks paving a way for you in white society you would be just another child of a dalit in Guyana.

FM

SHOULD AFRICAN AMERICANS DISCUSS THE ISSUE OF ABSENT BLACK FATHERS PUBLICLY?

June 11, 2013 โ€ By Nana Ekua Brew-Hammond
16 COMMENTS
 
Center for Urban Families founder Joseph T. Jones with President Obama.

Center for Urban Families founder Joseph T. Jones with President Obama. via The White House

 

When Barack Obama gave a 2008 Fatherโ€™s Day speech to the congregation of Apostolic Church of God in Chicago, he spoke frankly on the subject of absent fathers in the black community. Echoing some of what Bill Cosby said in his viral โ€œPound Cakeโ€ speech to the NAACP in 2004, then-candidate Obama lamented: โ€œToo many fathersโ€ฆ have abandoned their responsibilities, acting like boys instead of men.โ€

Citing statistics that show 64 percent of black children are raised in homes where the father is absent, he pointed out that children who grow up in households headed by a single mother are more likely to drop out of school, commit crime, go to prison, et-depressing-cetera.

Obama put it bluntly: โ€œThe foundations of our community and country are weaker because of this,โ€ adding, โ€œWe canโ€™t simply write these problems off to past injustices. Those injustices are realโ€ฆ but we canโ€™t keep on using that as an excuse.โ€

 

Many cringed at his candor. Jesse Jackson famously criticized Obama for the speech, saying the candidate was โ€œtalking down to black people.โ€ Jackson immediately apologized for the remarks (ironically meant for a private conversation that had been caught on a mic), and profusely expressed in a subsequent news conference, โ€œI donโ€™t want harm nor hurt to come to this campaign.โ€

Close ranks. Yank the dirty laundry off the line. End scene.

Just weeks ago, Obama repeated many of the sentiments articulated in his Fatherโ€™s Day speech in a commencement address at Morehouse College. I have to admit, before reading the speech for myself, I was irritated by some of the soundbytes that buzzed across Facebook, Twitter and various blogs. Specifically, I was concerned the Presidentโ€™s remarks about fatherlessness to a class of graduating black menโ€”men who had defied the stereotypeโ€”could be twisted in the public sphere, and used to support the caricature of pathological blackness many Americans still have.

Again, this fearโ€”my fearโ€”of dirty laundry.

But airing the laundry for all to see is a necessary step to correcting the problem, says Joseph T. Jones, Jr., founder of the Baltimore-based Center for Urban Families. โ€œThe problem is so massive that we can no longer have private conversations,โ€ Jones explains. โ€œWe need other people to be engaged in this conversation.โ€

FM
Originally Posted by Chief:

D2 YOU CAN BE STUPID SOMETIMES.

 

Denying that black fathers are not  absent from their family does not help the black community.

 

As Carib J love to say  you do not know what  black families are going through. 

I think you are in the dark ages. SIngle black fathers participate more in their children lives than any other. That is the finding of what black people already knew.

 

Additionally, with  white divorce rates over 50 percent, and more of the nation choosing not to marry but live together we have a different reality than the clamor that marriage is the standard.

 

In any event, if you were to look into the history of marriage it was never to raise children in healthy homes but to own the woman so as to secure a heir.

 

Take that for being stupid.

FM
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by Chief:

D2 YOU CAN BE STUPID SOMETIMES.

 

Denying that black fathers are not  absent from their family does not help the black community.

 

As Carib J love to say  you do not know what  black families are going through. 

Chief, Even though you may be correct, it is better to say Stormy is his usual self. The Guy has all the "RIGHT" answers for all topics.

Yes I am being my usual self and in tuned to the reality of what is provable in social life rather than mouth the false beliefs from parochial understanding.

 

 

FM

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