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By TOM FOOT
 

Members of the Kentish Town Community Organisation Ahmed Mohammed, Omar Abdo, Mujib Miah, Mukhatrar Moalin, Muhamed Aden, Abdullah Wahid, Jamal Miah, Kabir Ahmed and Mustafa Ahmed
Gang life has no glory, former Crip tells kids

Ex-gangster says he has only two friends left alive out of 60

A REFORMED gangster transfixed youths at Queen’s Crescent Community Centre on Saturday with stories of life on the mean streets of Los Angeles.
Abu Jaffa – one of the original members of the notorious Crips gang – told 40 teenagers from the area how he rose from the south side slums of LA to a gang member with anything he wanted.
During the 1970s and 1980s the Crips and their arch-rivals the Bloods became notorious for their gang warfare which cost hundreds of lives in shootings
He said: “For the first 13 years of my life I ate rotten fruit and sour milk. I was beaten up by white supremists at school for being black and by the blacks for being too well spoken. I learned from an early age that fear is an effective weapon.
“A few years later I had the latest Michael Jordans, the fly car, 20-inch tyres, bouncing hydraulics, 1,000 megawatts in my speakers – you could hear me coming from 50 yards away.”
Mr Jaffa – who refused to pose for pictures – now teaches sociology and the history of American gang studies in Nottingham University.
He used a slideshow to explain how two warring factions’ – the Crips and the Bloods – started off as “community action groups” living side by side in LA.
He told how they developed an intricate sign language and used coded graffiti to reveal death threats and newfound alliances.
The organisers of the event, the Kentish Town Community Organisation, wanted teenagers to see the brutal reality of street life glorified in gangster rap videos.
Mr Jaffa, who has two friends left alive from 60 gang members, said gangster rap wrongly glorified the life of a ‘G’.
He said: “This is no joke. None of these gangster rappers is for real. Tupac was executed for claiming affiliation to the Crips. Ganster rap glorifies gang life but any real gangster would tell you they want out. It is something people fall into because they have nothing else to do. It gives them a family.”
“All I can say to you here is that you have a choice. Life is different here. You have good communities and the relationship with the police is nothing like how it was in LA. You are not segregated and you eat the same food as everyone else.”
After the speech, Jamal Miah, 20 – who used to hang around in Queen’s Crescent but became a youth worker through a Kentish Town Community Organisation scheme – said: “I think an event like this really gets through to people.
“It shows people living round here a reality and that they have a choice apart from drugs and fighting.”
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