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Category: Life Events / Topics: Abuse and Addiction • Addictions • Change • Circumstances, Life Events • Crime, Justice, Punishment • Faith • Father's Day • Forgive, Forgiveness • Grace • Hopes & Dreams • Movies • Relationships • Social Issues
The Streets Were My Father Movie
by Rusty Wright
Posted: June 17, 2021
Who's your daddy? A story of hopelessness and redemption…
Could  you forgive someone who murdered your family member?  Or was an MIA parent?  Absent, neglectful or abusive fathers can  leave lifetime scars. The Streets Were My  Father depicts three sons who experienced it all, and have turned their  corners in dramatic, inspiring ways.
  
Lee  Habeeb and Our American Stories produced this moving  documentary about journeys from hopelessness to redemption. It releases on SalemNow.com on Father's Day, June  20.
Fatherless  homes correlate with numerous societal  blights, including poverty, drug and alcohol abuse, teen pregnancy, crime, behavioral  problems, and more.  This film's three  male subjects knew it all too well.
Gang unity and revenge
Carlos  Colon's single mom endured multiple abusive relationships.  Gangs and poverty permeated his young  life.  School seemed meaningless.  "The streets were my father," he  lamented.  
  
"What attracted me to the gang," he  recalls, "was actually just the unity. We all had something in  common.  A lot of us were miserable.  We had no fathers in our lives."  And gang life was risky: "I remember  getting into a shootout with somebody.   Shortly afterward, they came back and I got shot."
His feelings festered "like just a pot, so  much boiling and brewing.  I wanted to  get revenge."  Carlos shot and  killed a man, becoming a fugitive. His desire to be a father for his child  eventually got him caught.  A murder conviction  brought a twenty-year prison sentence.
Cocaine, shooting; reaping, sowing
Louis Dooley both loved and feared his dad, who  used his own mean demeanor as social currency, a trait young Louis sought to  emulate. His father abused his mother both verbally and physically, and lost  his life in a soured drug deal.  "God,  I hate you," Louis exclaimed.   Anger, bitterness and sadness haunted him.  No one helped him process his pain and  despair.  
  
Drug use morphed into drug dealing with crack  cocaine. "It just kind of spiraled out of control," Louis remembers,  "until a lot of violence [took] place with me doing drive-by  shootings."
"I just continued down that path.  And you know, there's a verse in the Bible that  talks about reaping what you sow.  And so  it was just a matter of time before I was going to reap what I sowed."  At age 19, convictions of attempted murder  and robbery earned a life-plus-100-years sentence.  He contemplated suicide.
Brothers in crime
Leslie Williams has sad childhood memories of  his father:  "The only time that he  interacted with me was when he was drunk.   He would set me on his lap and he'd rub my head and tell me 'Daddy loves  you' and that was it. That's all he said."
  
Petty theft became normal.  A gang "started treating me like I was  their brother.  This is how I began the  life of crime."  Convictions led to  prison.
Voids and a new father
In prison, each man re-evaluated his life.  Carlos "wanted something different"  to fill life's void.  Louis wanted  forgiveness and a "restart" in life.   Leslie heard a former gang leader talk about "how Jesus Christ had  changed his life."  In a pamphlet a  prisoner gave him, Louis read a famous statement of Jesus': “For God  so loved the world, that He gave His only Son, so that everyone  who believes in Him will not perish, but have eternal life."  
  
Each man, in their different circumstances,  made significant faith decisions that radically transformed  their lives.  Each began to see that  their heavenly father could be what their earthly father had not been.  
Carlos met personally with the father of the  son he murdered.  Their encounter, shown  in the film, is an extraordinary, poignant, moving example of how divine trust  can heel wounded hearts.  Conflict  resolution counselors and mediators would do well to incorporate this film  scene into their work.
Viewing The  Streets Were My Father is an extremely worthwhile way to spend 71 minutes.
www.TheStreetsWereMyFather.com Streaming from June 20 on SalemNow.com
Copyright © 2021 Rusty Wright
Search all articles by Rusty Wright
Rusty Wright is an author and lecturer who has spoken on six continents. He holds Bachelor of Science (psychology) and Master of Theology degrees from Duke and Oxford universities, respectively. www.RustyWright.com • E-mail the author (moc.loa@thgirwytsur*) • Author's website (personal or primary**)* For web-based email, you may need to copy and paste the address yourself.
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        Posted: June 17, 2021   Accessed 1,024 times
		
        
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