This year I’m celebrating Black History Month by talking about some significant issues in the Black community. Today guns. Fifteen-year-old Hadiya Pendleton died a week after performing at the inauguration, a victim of gun violence in Chicago, but in too many ways her story is extraordinary because black America is plagued by gun violence.
In 2011 the number of blacks under 22 killed by guns was more than triple the number of U.S. soldiers killed in Afghanistan. The number of black children killed by gunfire since 1979 is over 13 times more than the number of blacks lynched between 1882 and 1968.
And since 1969 homicides involving firearms have been the leading cause of death for black males aged 15 to 19. That is a leading cause of the hopelessness and nihilism and morbidity we see in our young black men who feel themselves one step from the graveyard every day. Perhaps more tragically: most homicides are interracial. The vast majority of killers of blacks are blacks.
The uproar over Trayvon Martin’s death and Oscar Grant’s death was righteous but we’re killing each other each day. No community is more in need of gun control, is more in need of rescue from America’s gun epidemic, than black people. And we know it. We’re extremely in favor of gun control.
A recent Pew poll found Blacks far more pro gun control than whites. Just after Newtown 68% of blacks said gun control was more important than gun rights while over 50% of whites said gun rights were still more important. 53% of blacks think gun ownership puts you more at risk while 54% of whites think guns protect. Perhaps we know that gun laws can work.









