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Hand
& Eye: Fifteen Years of the Dorothea Lange–Paul Taylor
Prize
September 19, 2005–January 8, 2006
Juanita Kreps and Lyndhurst Galleries

Mara Salvatrucha
DONNA DECESARE AND LUIS RODRIGUEZ (1993)
Nearly one-fifth of El Salvador’s population went north in
the 1980s. Most settled in Los Angeles or Washington, D.C. Even
Mexico, which has many more of its citizens living in El Norte,
has not lost such a large percentage of its population. While the
impact of this migration is much greater on El Salvador than on
the United States, riots in Washington and L.A. in 1991 brought
these new immigrants into the public awareness. Luis Rodriguez and
Donna DeCesare have documented the rise of street gangs, specifically
the Salvadoran gangs Mara Salvatrucha and 18th Street in Los Angeles,
and its impact on young people, culture, and politics in the United
States and in El Salvador.
PHOTO GALLERY
Photographs by Donna DeCesare
WRITING
Gang of Our Own Making
By Luis Rodriguez, Op-Ed contributor, from the
New York Times (March 28, 2005)
San Fernando, Calif.—In 1996, I was present at a meeting of
gang members and community leaders in San Salvador. Heavily tattooed
young men, one with a hand mangled from a hand grenade blast, told
of the horrifying violence and gang warfare that had succeeded the
battles of the twelve-year civil war on El Salvador’s streets.
Aside from their tattoos, what was striking about these gang members
is that they had grown up not in El Salvador, but in the United
States, and that the gangs they were in—Mara Salvatrucha and
18th Street—were started in Los Angeles.
That gathering was startling evidence of the globalization of United
States–based gangs. Just how much Mara Salvatrucha, or MS-13,
has grown since then was evident this month when the Department
of Homeland Security announced the arrests of 103 gang members in
New York State, Miami, Washington, the Baltimore area, and Los Angeles.
Mara Salvatrucha is now reported to operate in 31 states and five
countries, with 100,000 members across Canada, Guatemala, Honduras,
and Mexico. The government says MS-13 is the fastest-growing and
most violent gang in the country. It describes MS-13 as having “cells”
that smuggle people, guns, and contraband across international lines,
and some federal officials have mentioned possible ties between
MS-13 and Al Qaeda.
While there’s no proof that MS-13 has any connection to Al
Qaeda, it has something in common with it: American policy played
a role in the creation of both groups.
MS-13 is a result of our policy in Central America, specifically
the policy that fueled the civil wars that sent more than two million
refugees to the United States in the 1980s. Some of their children
confronted well-entrenched Mexican-American gangs in the barrios
where they landed. For their protection, they created their own
groups, emulating the style of older Chicano gangs like 18th Street.
MS-13, for instance, was born in the crowded, crack-ridden Mexican
and Central American community of Pico-Union, just west of the skyscrapers
of downtown Los Angeles.
After the Los Angeles riots of 1992, government officials declared
the main culprits to be young African-American and Latino gang members.
In the mid-90s as many as 40,000 youths accused of being members
of MS-13, 18th Street, and other gangs were deported every year
to Mexico and Central America. Sophisticated, tattooed, English-speaking
young men raised and acculturated in the United States were sent
to countries with no resources, no jobs, and no history with these
types of gangs.
Soon the deported members of MS-13 and 18th Street began recruiting
among homeless and glue-sniffing youth who had never been to the
United States. In a few years, these new members were making their
way to the United States, ending up in far-flung corners of the
country and recruiting a new generation. When the Department of
Homeland Security deports the men it arrested last week, the cycle
will start again.
When I was growing up in East L.A. in the 1960s, I was a member
of a Chicano street gang. I was shot at a half-dozen times and arrested
on several occasions. I understand why a teenager finds joining
a gang necessary. But thanks to a few teachers, youth workers, and
community leaders, I eventually left the gang life.
What would have happened to me if I had been deported to a homeland
I barely knew? The gang members at the 1996 meeting I attended were
trying to find alternatives to violence and drugs. They wanted to
be incorporated into the country, to be allowed to rebuild, to learn
skills, to make decisions about bettering their communities, and
to stop being harassed or beaten by the police and attacked by death
squads.
While the meeting ended on a high note, with people applauding and
promising changes, in the end little happened. A group of former
MS-13 and 18th Street gang youth formed a peace and justice organization
called Homies Unidos, but their efforts over the years to obtain
jobs, training, tattoo removal, and counseling were largely ignored.
Instead, El Salvador instituted a “mano dura,” or “firm
hand,” policy. It became illegal to be a member of a gang,
whether a crime was committed or not. Jails became filled with gang
youth from Los Angeles. The same policy was instituted in Honduras.
According to news reports, these governments were getting advice
from American law enforcement agencies, including the Los Angeles
Police Department.
Today we’re confronted with the same choice: we can continue
the repression, arrests, and firm-hand policies that only guarantee
more violence and more lost youth. Or we can bring gang youth to
the table and work to create jobs and training, providing real options
for meaningful work and healthy families. In other words, we can
help sow the seeds of transformation, eliminating the reasons young
people join gangs in the first place.
We have the means to do both. Both have great costs. But one choice
will worsen the violence and terror; the other will help bring peace,
both in the streets of the United States and in the barrios of America’s
neighbors.
Essay by Luis Rodriguez reprinted with the permission of the New
York Times.
banner image:
Installation view of Hand & Eye:
Fifteen Years of the Lange–Taylor Prize. Photograph
by Christoper Sims.
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