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Black Collegian News & Views
Are There Similarities Between Greeks and Gangs?
A visitor to a college campus might be confused, says one student journalist from FAMU
By Christine Thomasos
Black College Wire
Across the country, young black men gather wearing matching colors, throwing up signs
with their hands, and using unique calls recognizable and exclusive only to their circles.
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Florida Department of Corrections
The Crips handsign |
Most would assume that this group is a gang. However, stepping onto a college campus
would confuse anybody trying to identify these groups, because Greek-letter organizations
share very similar customs.
The World Book Encyclopedia describes gangs as a group of people who associate with one
another for social or criminal reasons.
Elijah Bowdre, a member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc. from Long Beach, Calif., said
he has grown up around gangs and can see how some people would make the mistake of comparing
them to a Greek-letter organization.
"I always grew up with gangs around me," said Bowdre, 21, a senior finance student at
Florida A&M University. "When I first came on campus I saw (a fraternity) with red jackets,
and I thought they were Bloods."
Bowdre admits to seeing similarities in the physical setup of the two groups, but he
recognizes important differences in the purpose of each group.
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Kenon White/Black College Wire
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"A gang's purpose is to destroy other gangs and make money through crimes," Bowdre said.
"A Greek letter organization's purpose is not committing crimes; the purpose is well
documented, to serve the community."
Camron Hawkins, 18, who said he is a member of the Crips gang, does not agree.
"There are people who haven't been in a gang who commit worse crimes than us," said
Hawkins, a Tallahassee, Fla., native. "Its not always about violence, it's about money."
Hawkins considers gangs and fraternities to be one and the same, and even considers a
family to be a gang.
Ironically, a lack of family structure is what draws many to join gangs in the first
place.
Robert Corley, a North Carolina Crip for 14 years, has left his former lifestyle to
become a church laborer in Tallahassee.
"We get with our own kind of people to form gangs because we come from a broken family,"
Corley said. "We find people that we can relate to, and we unify ourselves to become an
army."
According to sociologist Daniel J. Monti, quoted in the book "Gangs" by Gail B. Stewart,
the family structure provided by gangs helps to build young people the same way families,
churches, schools and neighbors do.
However, Bowdre said he does not believe that sociologists can give expert opinions about
things they have never experienced.
"While sociologists are at home reading their books, gang members are in the streets,"
Bowdre said. "They probably don't fully understand gang culture. You can't only go off of an
assumption."
Although gangs provide a family structure, many question whether gangs are worth the
destruction that they cause the wider community. That question is not frequently asked of
Greek letter organizations.
"You can't put us on the same scale," Bowdre said. "The net sum of productivity of gangs
and fraternities are completely different."
Elizabeth Hollifield, a psychology professor at FAMU, agrees.
"I don't think gangs and fraternities can be compared, because gangs have a very negative
connotation and fraternities don't," Hollifield said. "It's like comparing apples and
oranges. They are both fruits, but they have very different tastes."
Christine Thomasos, a student at Florida A&M University, writes for
the Famuan. To comment, e-mail Black College Wire. |