“The gangs filled a void in society, and the void was the absence of family life. The gang became a family. For some of those guys in the gang that was the only family they knew, because when their mothers had them they were too busy having children for other men. Some of them never knew their daddies. Their daddies never look back after they got their mothers pregnant, and those guys just grew up and they couldn’t relate to nobody. When they had their problems, who could they have talked to? Nobody would listen, so they gravitated together and form a gang. George Mackey, the former representative for the historic Fox Hill community in The Bahamas.” GovernmentFamilyEmptinessFatherhoodPoliticiansFamily LifeGangstersComing TogetherPolicy MakersGang MembersYouth MinistryHurting PeopleStreet LifeBroken HomesSingle MothersGangsSense Of BelongingGang InterventionAt Risk YouthYouth OutreachGang LifeEmpty NestFatherless HomesAbsentee FathersYouth ProgramsRepresentativeAt Risk CommunitiesGang PreventionSocial IllsVoid WithinDead Beat DadsYouth GroupsGang FamilyGang FormationHurting ChildrenMember Of ParliamentMissing In ActionYouth ClubYouth Problems Book:The Fight of My Life is Wrapped Up in My Father Source: The Fight of My Life is Wrapped Up in My Father
“Before I was born my father disowned me. You know those ones who get the females pregnant, and then say the baby is not theirs? He rejected me, told my mother that I am not his child, so I never had a relationship with my father. Shelton ‘Apples’ Burrows reform gang leader” RelationshipRejectionFatherhoodHurting PeopleSingle MothersFatherless HomesAbsentee FathersBroken FamiliesBroken LivesDisownDead Beat DadsNot WantedHurting ChildrenFather Hunger Book:The Fight of My Life is Wrapped Up in My Father Source: The Fight of My Life is Wrapped Up in My Father