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Community Unity Council To Host MLK Day Event and March

Street organizations are continuing their efforts to sustainably integrate themselves into Memphis’ community, while also improving relationships with each other.

The Community Unity March on Memphis is scheduled for January 20th to commemorate Martin Luther King Day on January 20. Participants will begin their day at 201 Poplar with a brief program at 9 a.m. before marching to the National Civil Rights Museum.

This march is a continuation of the Community Unity initiative that seeks to fix citywide problems while also engaging marginalized groups in Memphis. 

Community organizer Keedran Franklin has worked with city leaders and the public to change the conversation around what most people call “gangs.” 

“We don’t use the word gangs, right,” Franklin said. “That’s code word for local municipalities to get from the feds to say we have a gang problem. We don’t have a gang problem. What we have is under-resourced and underserved people who are creating their own avenue.”

This distinction prompted Franklin to have some “tough” conversations with people, including Mayor Paul Young.

“Mayor Young and myself had to get through some past issues,” Franklin said. “I used to be hard as hell on Paul, back when he was part of HUD(Housing and Urban Development)  and MHA (Memphis Housing Authority), I was hard as f*ck on Paul, because he was with the previous regime. We had to work through our bullsh*t first, which was being open and honest.”

Franklin explained that he also took this as an enrichment opportunity and gave the mayor a copy of King David and Boss Daley: The Black Disciples, Mayor Daley, and Chicago on the Edge by Lance Williams, to help him understand that street organizations originated as political ones that were “left behind because of government interference.”

“It’s not about gangs, [the] streets, and killing,” Franklin said. “They’re actually bettering themselves and growing themselves.”

As an organizer across the country, Franklin said his colleagues would call him after these conversations and after spotting Young in places like Mississippi, they spoke highly of him. Franklin said these instances gave Young the opportunity to see these individuals doing work in the community to better themselves, thus helping to change the narrative around them.

“[To Mayor Young] People are all in these spaces man, doing the work that needs to be done,” Franklin said. “That’s it. Just a lot of tough dialogue, and again, just showing and proving that we aren’t as bad as people saying we are.”

Martin Luther King Day not only provides an opportunity for street organizations to continue their work on a more visible level, but an effort to return civil rights to its mission of inclusivity.

Franklin said the day is about both remembrance and community – including that of the streets. He said the initially planned on participating in another march scheduled for that day, but never heard back from organizers when he reached out.

“I was like, well we’ll do our own march,” Franklin said. “You don’t see these types of guys down there. You don’t see the streets at this event. This is to open their eyes to like, ‘hey there’s something that goes on and we should participate in.’ Don’t be afraid to participate.”

The lack of response seemed to work in Franklin’s favor, as it gave way for him and street organizations to create their own event with the support of groups from the community and around the world. He emphasized this is a “multifaceted effort” from both “inside state and federal prisons,” to outside to ensure that all populations are accounted for.

“The idea is us creating this program, creating these new norms, dropping off at 201, and then marching to the Civil Rights Museum where we will also announce these new norms that these organizations have agreed to move by,” Franklin said. “Pushing the effort for us to move, so we can do better by our community.”

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Community Organizer Engages Street Organizations Through Unity Events

Looking to fix citywide problems, organizer Keedran Franklin has taken the initiative to organize around one specific “marginalized and apathetic” group — that of street organizations.

He explained that what most people refer to as “gangs” members call “street organizations.” Franklin added people often count them out, but in reality they are “innovative, smart, and strong.” He hopes he is able to create different programs and systems for these communities, as he saw their input had been absent in decision-making.

“Last year I had a few talks with a couple of billionaires,” Franklin said. “What they stated was they’re afraid to deal directly with the community. Their fear is that people only want to be gang members and cause destruction.”

However, he said, this rationale doesn’t consider that, as a result of being left out and ostracized for so long, members of street organizations are inclined to lean into public perception, as opposed to working to change people’s mind about them. Everyone has issues they deal with, he said, and if they dealt with the issues at hand, the crime issues in the city could “work themselves out.”

This led Franklin to try to change this crime-motivated perception of this demographic not only for the public, but also for those members. He knew if you actually speak and engage with some of them, you’ll find out how they can show up, with good ideas, too.

“There’s respect across the board,” Franklin said. “There are people who are like-minded across different fences. They want to do things differently also. That’s what I’ve been doing — this show of public support of getting guys on the street in the open, and let them not be afraid to organize and show themselves in a positive light.”

At the end of July, Franklin hosted a “Community Unity Barbeque” where he invited community members to “bring an open mind and a hungry belly.” Franklin’s goal in hosting this event was to have a “meeting of the minds while breaking bread.”

While community events with the purpose of providing unity are not new to the city, Franklin’s intention with his iteration was to engage members of different street organizations to “show up with love” for a “day of relaxation” that would also encourage these groups to transform the way they look at decision-making in “[their] respective spaces.”

“It was all smiles — not one frown that day, not one argument,” Franklin said. “We had different organizations there. These are guys that you would think are in opposition or at war with each other, so that was to show that’s not true — trying to change the narrative.”

The barbecue gave these organizations the opportunity to “break bread” in one place, Franklin also wanted to encourage them to create change in their own backyards. This led to him and others planning the “MemUnity Street Sweep Clean-Up” on Sunday, August 11th, from 10 a.m. to noon.

“Instead of us all showing up and congregating all in one place, we’re taking these ideas and we’re doing them in our area, our homes, and streets we grew up in or frequent,” Franklin said.

The support for the cleanup is rapidly growing with multiple neighborhoods participating, from people in North Memphis, Frayser, and more.

“For the community to see this effort take place all over the city, and for the people involved to see the goals we set become a reality, it’ll spiral into the next event, which is a street conference at the end of August,” Franklin said.