Last year’s national average for violent crimes was 387 crimes per 100,000 people. In Oakland, the rate of violent crime was more than five times that average. On Sunday, host Melissa Harris-Perry spoke with reporter Rebecca Ruiz and Oakland resident and activist Kyndra Simmons about the psychological impact the constant violence has on youth.
Ruiz’s latest article for the East Bay Express, “Life, Death and PTSD in Oakland,” profiles youth in Oakland–many of whom exhibit symptoms of or have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder caused by exposure to chronic violence. Many of the youth Ruiz interviews have lost loved ones to random violence in Oakland, or have been victims themselves. One young woman describes refusing to walk in her neighborhood because “bullets don’t have names,” and being unable to take the bus for fear of being kidnapped on the way to the bus stop; a friend of hers was kidnapped and sexually assaulted while walking.
Kyndra Simmons, program manager for the Caught in the Crossfire program for the Oakland organization Youth Alive!, said young people there “are living in what we do consider the war zones… it’s a challenge just trying to walk from home or to school or to the bus.” However, unlike soldiers diagnosed with PTSD after returning from combat, the war zone is these children’s home.
“We call it PTSD but it’s actually ongoing trauma,” Simmons said. “Because they can’t get away from it.”
Her organization works to nurture leadership and life skills of youth affected by violence, and helps the young people learn to stop violence in their city. Simmons said the chronic violence has an identifiable impact on students’ psychological state.
“They hear gunfire, they cross yellow tape, so when they go to school, they’re agitated,” she told Harris-Perry. “They walk around angry or they self-medicate.” Simmons also cited how exposure increases young people’s propensity to commit violent acts themselves. “Violence is learned behavior… [if] a young person is a victim, we soon know that after that they will become a perpetrator.”








