This week I’m going to change up my blog format and talk about Camden. This week I have the pleasure of spending a week of working with Urban Promise in Camden, NJ. During the day we spend time doing work projects and in the afternoon we spend time with 1st-4th graders at an afterschool program run by the ministry.
Coming into this week I was very weary and a little scared. This was because of all of the horror stories that I had heard about Camden, that its one of the most violent cities in America, less that 50% of high school students graduate, and that the people look to outsiders with disdain, mistrust and hatred.
Since spending time here with the people, that mindset as since passed. During the afterschool program I had the pleasure of meeting a senior named Miles (he spends his afternoons volunteering and helping out the ministry) and when asked what comes to mind when you think about Camden? He answered It is a city misjudged, full of untapped potential. Something about that really stuck with me. A city misjudged. But how can the statistics of this seemingly horribly city possibly be wrong? While yes it is a very tough neighborhood, there is signs of hope. And that comes from the residents of the city.
While walking to our renovation site, young students would wave and say hi and were generally very excited by our presence and very welcoming. Virtually every single car stops and lets you cross the street, something I have seldom seen in my home and college towns. People here are friendly and smile at you and actually say hello and acknowledge your presence. The complete opposite of what I expected and from what I see at home.
So I would have to agree full heartedly with what Miles is saying. It is most definitely a city misjudged. Even though the tour that we went on showed a complete opposite view of what I just expressed, with boarded up houses on every street, schools that look like prisons and drug dealers on the corners, there still is hope. New houses are starting to be built to replace the row homes. These homes are called Hope homes. Even though it is a visual upgrade from what they were in the past, it shows the people that there is a change starting and they will no longer have to turn to their current methods to make a life for themselves. There is hope for this broken place, and maybe this week my fellowship and I can start to make a change along with the wonderful people that I have encountered here.
In my next Camden update I will talk more about what we are doing here to make a difference and if it is finished link my first attempt at a movie. The movie is a culmination of all the photographs, video clips and interviews that I am taking this week.