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Dr. Alvin Poussaint, a Black psychiatrist, speaks about the growing incidence of Black homicide.
1974 (May 17)
In a speech at Emory University in Atlanta, Dr. Alvin Poussaint, a Black psychiatrist affiliated with the Harvard School of Medicine, gave a major assessment of the growing incidence of homicide among Blacks. Poussaint said that 23 percent of the deaths among Black males aged seventeen to twenty-five were the result of homicide, and that the matter should be treated as a health problem. Among the causes of homicide among Blacks, according to Poussaint, is "Black racism” or low self-esteem, which is evidenced by the use of racial epithets before a homicide is committed and by an inner battle by Black men to preserve their self-respect in a racist society. Another contributing factor is the devaluation of Black life. Because of this, Poussaint said, some police officers do not follow up on solving crimes in Black neighborhoods and the media fails to give much attention to homicide unless it involves whites. Poussaint contended that the American Black community was in a state of despair and demoralization, partly because of its failure to realize some of the dreams of the civil rights era and partly because of governmental corruption. When such corruption goes unpunished, he said, a “jungle mentality is created and people begin to believe that they can do whatever they can get away with.” Reduction of crime among Blacks, Poussaint suggested, required the development of new values and psychological as well as political approaches. He called for the regulation of violence depicted in the media, particularly as portrayed in Black exploitation films; the establishment of homicide prevention centers to help potential criminals before they commit murder; the control of handguns; increased Black employment, particularly among Black youths; and the promotion of Black pride or Black consciousness programs. Although the matter was defined by Poussaint as a Black health problem, he concluded that it would take interracial cooperation to solve it. Poussaint is the author of Why Blacks Kill Blacks (1972).
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.