Thursday, August 1, 2019
The late Cedric Willis is the honoree of a youth-crime forum tonight in Jackson where participants will brainstorm both causes and solutions of violence in the capital city. It is the fourth crime conversation, with participants of various generations gathering in dialogue circles, that the Mississippi Youth Media Project has organized in the last year or so. The student journalists are compiling a long list of potential violence solutions, and asking attendees to pledge to at least one action, as past participants have done. They plan to hold an all-day violence summit in future months to develop a long-term strategy for correcting conditions that lead to violence in the city.
Tonight's crime forum is at Walton Elementary School at 3200 Bailey Avenue from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. One Voice Mississippi is providing the snacks and drinks.
Willis was a Jackson native who served 12 years in prison for a murder he didn't commit, then was free for 13 years before he was murdered at the corner of Dewitt and Bailey avenues near his home in Jackson. He was 44. Police arrested two men for his murder, Debreco Williams, 33, and Corey Brent, 28, on July 11.
The JFP's 'Preventing Violence' Series
A full archive of the JFP's "Preventing Violence" series, supported by grants from the Solutions Journalism Network. Photo of Zeakyy Harrington by Imani Khayyam.
A friend of the Youth Media Project, Willis spoke often with the student journalists about his experiences on the streets of Jackson and inside Parchman prison. He also explained to the students why the story then-Jackson Free Press journalist Brian Johnson did about him in 2006 was so vital to him.
"Take the time to get it right," Cedric would tell the interns and teenagers. "Tell the whole story. It's not your story; it's mine. Get your facts right."
Then he'd talk about Brian showing up and staying for hours or insisting that they go visit the house where Cedric had lived when the cops came, although his mother had long since moved, or asking him on deadline the brand of sneakers he wore then.
Johnson, who wrote about Willis for the Jackson Free Press in 2006, wrote about him again after his death, ending his recent column: "We are left to rage that one of our best men lost his life at only 44 years of age. I cannot accept it. I will not. I am angry at the injustice and the senseless waste. But I am angriest at the indifference so many in Mississippi show to our broken justice system, to our broken political system. I need you to care. I need you to be angry along with me. I need you to speak out and fight for real change. "We all failed Cedric in life. Let us not fail him in death. I need you to insist on a better way, on a better life for all of us. I need you to care."
Members of Willis' family plan to attend the forum. Attendees will discuss the following questions in small groups with all voices welcome. (Volunteers to help set up at 5 p.m. are also welcome.)
- How can Jackson help young people growing up in trauma?
- How can Jackson help people who are recently released from prison?
- How can we help prevent shootings in Jackson?
- How can we help young people connect with mentors and role models?
- How can we improve the narrative about Jackson's young people?
Read about potential solutions for Jackson violence at jfp.ms/preventingviolence.