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Invisible Child (Original Post) SJohnson Dec 2013 OP
Have been reading this elfin Dec 2013 #1
Bump davidpdx Dec 2013 #2
Incredibly good read. Thank you for posting this. SharonAnn Dec 2013 #3
No amount of public assistance can overcome XemaSab Dec 2013 #4
HUGE K&R Iwillnevergiveup Dec 2013 #5

elfin

(6,262 posts)
1. Have been reading this
Wed Dec 11, 2013, 04:20 PM
Dec 2013

Real journalism might not be dead after all.

Comments also literate even though I don't agree with the more conservative takes ( ex. Bring back orphanages.)

Photographs also striking to the marrow of our current resources inequality gap.

davidpdx

(22,000 posts)
2. Bump
Thu Dec 12, 2013, 07:35 AM
Dec 2013

You might include a small excerpt as well. I was going to post this, but saw yours. I just started reading it tonight.

She wakes to the sound of breathing. The smaller children lie tangled beside her, their chests rising and falling under winter coats and wool blankets. A few feet away, their mother and father sleep near the mop bucket they use as a toilet. Two other children share a mattress by the rotting wall where the mice live, opposite the baby, whose crib is warmed by a hair dryer perched on a milk crate.

Slipping out from her covers, the oldest girl sits at the window. On mornings like this, she can see all the way across Brooklyn to the Empire State Building, the first New York skyscraper to reach 100 floors. Her gaze always stops at that iconic temple of stone, its tip pointed celestially, its facade lit with promise.

“It makes me feel like there’s something going on out there,” says the 11-year-old girl, never one for patience. This child of New York is always running before she walks. She likes being first — the first to be born, the first to go to school, the first to make the honor roll.

snip

Dasani’s own neighborhood, Fort Greene, is now one of gentrification’s gems. Her family lives in the Auburn Family Residence, a decrepit city-run shelter for the homeless. It is a place where mold creeps up walls and roaches swarm, where feces and vomit plug communal toilets, where sexual predators have roamed and small children stand guard for their single mothers outside filthy showers.

It is no place for children. Yet Dasani is among 280 children at the shelter. Beyond its walls, she belongs to a vast and invisible tribe of more than 22,000 homeless children in New York, the highest number since the Great Depression, in the most unequal metropolis in America.

http://www.nytimes.com/projects/2013/invisible-child/?chapt=1#/?src=mv?WT.mc_id=NYT-YHO-NYT-IC_P1?chapt=1&chapt=1

Iwillnevergiveup

(9,298 posts)
5. HUGE K&R
Sat Dec 14, 2013, 10:30 PM
Dec 2013

I hope this wins a Pulitzer - it is astonishing.
And this post should make it to the Greatest - thank you for posting it!

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