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Ministries for Peach and Justice
When Alexie Torres-Fleming, the director of Youth Ministries for Peace and Justice, was growing up in the 1960s, she would sit at the window of her ninth-floor housing project and watch the South Bronx burn.
“There was a period where I was really ashamed of my community,” said Torres-Fleming, 43, who was raised with her three siblings by Catholic Puerto Rican immigrants in public housing during the epidemic of drug abuse and gang violence.
“If you’re black or brown and you grow up poor the way we did, the message you get is that you’re only going to be successful when you can get out of the ghetto.”
After fleeing the Bronx in her 20s to live and work in Manhattan, Torres-Fleming met human rights icon Luis Garden Acosta, who mentored her at his Williamsburg activist group, El Puente. Inspired by the power of grassroots community organizations, she returned to the South Bronx to ignite local activism.
She joined a community action group at Holy Cross parish. In 1992, after the church led a march against crack houses in the area, drug dealers set the church ablaze in retaliation.
But Torres-Fleming was more devastated over the drug epidemic in her neighborhood.
“Outside of that building, people were being burned and desecrated by drugs every single day,” she said. “Buildings can be rebuilt, but we can’t ignore that, every day, our communities are being destroyed.”
After the fire, Torres-Fleming and four activists formed Youth Ministries for Peace and Justice in 1994 to involve local youth in such issues as saving the Bronx River and improving police-community relations.
Torres-Fleming now lives near where she grew up, raising a son and daughter.
A leader who said she never imagined the program would grow so large, Torres-Fleming is busy with plans to build a new site at St. Anthony’s convent in the South Bronx.
About 75 young people, from ages 7 to 21, address social justice, environmental and educational issues at YMPJ. Torres-Fleming hopes they will ultimately be the ones standing up for their community.
“People have the capacity to fix and save themselves,” Torres-Fleming said. “It’s much more empowering to let them do that.”
VITAL STATS
Bio bits: Lives in the South Bronx, with husband, John, and two children.
Proudest accomplishment: Her children Patrick, 6, and Grace, 2.
Favorite Bible text: “Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled.” - Matthew 5:6
Favorite movie: “Romero”
Biggest hero: Mohandas Gandhi
Favorite quote: “You must be the change you wish to see in the world.”
SOURCE: NYDailyNews.com
Tags: Alexie Torres-Fleming, Bronx Burning, Bronx Education, Bronx Living, Bronx Neighborhood News, Bronx News, Bronx People, Bronx River, Education, El Puente, Holy Cross parish, puerto rican, South Bronx, St. Anthony's convent in the South Bronx, Youth Ministries for Peace and Justice
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The former crack house on Randall Street in the South Bronx, one of several drug dens targeted for protest by Alexie Torres-Fleming and her church group 15 years ago, is now cleaned up, with a manicured lawn and a "For Rent" sign in its window.
In the process of trying to clean up and develop this troubled neighborhood, an effort that has earned Mrs. Torres-Fleming a Jane Jacobs Medal for urban renewal from the Rockefeller Foundation, a "For Rent" sign in a house where drugs were once sold represents a small victory in a larger struggle.
The daughter of Puerto Rican immigrants, Mrs. Torres-Fleming, 43, founded the Youth Ministries for Peace and Justice in 1992 across the street from the housing projects in which she grew up.
"We walked to seven different crack houses in the neighborhood and prayed. And it was life-changing because it brought together my personal politics as well as my faith,"
Mrs. Torres-Fleming is one of this year's two recipients of the Jane Jacobs Medal, who will be announced today. The medals are awarded to individuals whose efforts and visions have contributed to the "vibrancy and variety" of New York City. Now in their second year, the medals and a $100,000 award commemorate the Rockefeller grant bestowed in 1950 on the urbanist and journalist Jane Jacobs.
The incident with the drug dealers may have been life-changing for Mrs. Torres-Fleming, but it was also life-threatening. In retaliation, several drug dealers torched the interior of her church and made death threats against its pastor, she said.
The South Bronx has undergone a series of visible demographic changes, Mrs. Torres-Fleming said, recalling the "white flight" of business owners in the late 1970s, urban blight, and then her own migration to Manhattan from the Bronx shortly thereafter.
Once her church was vandalized, Mrs. Torres-Fleming decided to return to the Bronx in 1992, a move that surprised her family.
Since then her work has included directing youth outreach and arts programs, attracting economic development, and supervising environmental and fiscal education programs, among others.
In September, her largest development project to date, a park on the Bronx River at a site where an old concrete plant was abandoned more than a decade ago, will open. The $10 million project, funded by city, state, and federal funds, aims to clean up the riverfront and is part of her goal to promote more "green" initiatives in a neighborhood hemmed in by four major highways. The 10-acre park will provide residents with a dock, a beach, a reading area, gardens, and ultimately an amphitheater.
"Alexie exemplifies a 21st-century Jane Jacobs, in that she is a person of color and a woman working in the South Bronx, which is a neighborhood most people had given up on and left for dead but which is now experiencing this rebirth,"
But Mrs. Torres-Fleming believes that it is just a matter of time before gentrification spreads to the South Bronx, which she says could push out long-term residents.
Asked to give the clearest and most obvious sign that her neighborhood may be facing gentrification, Mrs. Torres-Fleming responded, with noticeable concern in her voice: