National Night Out event in New Haven offers comfort to community
This city’s commemoration of the annual National Night Out
Tuesday in Edgewood Park carried a special meaning for a community mourning the
recent shooting death of one of their own and reeling over other shooting
victims that followed.
The friends of Tyriek Keyes, 14, were among those who
gathered in the park on a beautiful summer’s evening.
Tyriek, who had just completed eighth grade, was shot
repeatedly on Bassett Street July 16. He died four days later.
Then on July 22, a 13-year-old boy was shot in the area of
Shelton Avenue and Ivy Street. He survived.
The day after that, a 21-year-old man was shot in the face
on Walnut Street.
The crimes galvanized the neighborhoods. Police arrested a
man in the wounding of the 13-year-old.
While planning this year’s National Night Out, New Haven
police officials worked with community groups such as Life Changing Outreach
Ministries, the Cornell Scott Hill Health Center and Tunnel Vision to get kids
into the park and send them a reassuring message.
Kimberly Artis of Life Changing Outreach Ministries noted
police brought vehicles such as the SWAT Team “bear cat” to let kids climb
around inside and bond with the officers.
“Youths need to know the police are here to make you feel
safe, not to cause division,” Artis said. “This is a chance to see them in a
different light.”
Standing nearby Artis, Assistant Police Chief Luiz Casanova
agreed that while “we’ve had a challenging few weeks, with the shootings,”
people should not forget that crime has been down in the city for the past few
years.
Casanova said the police department’s approach has changed
in recent times, with an emphasis on community policing. “We’re not throwing
out a net and stopping everyone. We have to go after individuals. We know who
they are. We have to do this together, with the community.”
Casanova added, “We’re doing a lot better than other cities
that look like us.”
But Kejuan Simmons, 15, who was one of Tyriek’s close
friends, was not comforted by any such reassurances as he stood in Edgewood
Park.
“He was like a brother to me,” Kejuan said. “It’s like losing
another half of me.”
“Another body,” he said. “When can we stop this? What do we
have to do to stop the violence around here?”
Asked if he has any solutions, Kejuan said, “Get rid of the
guns. That’s all I can think of.”
He said Tyriek’s death has “changed my life. It changed who
I hang around with. I encourage people to change their lives with music.”
Kejuan was wearing a shirt that read “N-Finity Muzik,” in
which he is involved.
His father, Nijajuan Howard, founder of the youth-oriented
entertainment company Tunnel Vision, said Tyriek’s death was “a reality check,
a wakening” for his two sons. The other son, Michael Bethune, is 16.
“They said, ‘That was a friend, about the same age as me,’”
Howard noted.
Lisa Sessions-Gray, pastor of Life Changing Outreach
Ministries, said, “This event is important, especially with all the violence
that’s going on. It’s important for us to be a presence for our children. We
want to import positivity, to outshine the dark cloud that’s been hovering over
us the last couple of weeks.”
On a stage set up in the park, a group of youths, the
Heartbreakers, serenaded the crowd by singing “In the Still of the Night,” a
perennial doo-wop hit originally recorded by the Five Satins in New Haven in
the mid-1950s.
Chaz Carmon, president of the violence-opposing community
group Ice the Beef, to which Tyriek belonged, asked for a moment of silence for
him.
“It hit home for us,” he said. “That could have been any one
of us.”
After he stepped off the stage, Carmon said, “I believe
people are stepping up now and trying to do something. This has been going on
too long.”
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