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Saturday, January 6, 2024
Live To See The Day by Nikhil Goyal
This is a tale of how brown skinned children end up being more handicapped than white children are; a story in three parts. This is the tale of three different children--Ryan, Corem and Giancarlos--with three different sets of circumstances and three different bad breaks. They are all from Kensington, and babies born with an address in Kensington aren’t expected to live beyond their 71st birthday — a staggering 17 years less than children born to families in Society Hill, less than four miles away.
A chunk of the book is spent world-building so readers can grasp the muddy terrain these children navigate, and Goyal does so by layering social systems atop one another so readers can draw connections. As Goyal explains it, underfunded public schools are at the heart of the issue. Schools are governed by racist educational policies that push students into the criminal system through the use of metal detectors, zero-tolerance rules and temperamental resource officers. Children leave the schoolyard and return home to families drowning because of crippling poverty, food insecurity, chronic joblessness, inequitable access to physical and mental health care, domestic violence, evictions, and addiction.
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