People marching: poster saying "South Bronx for Change".
Cambodian children in the South Bronx.
Teens clean up the rubble in order to create a neighborhood garden.
Life carries on in the War Zone
Priest and teens on sidewalk with African- American woman walking by
Candido with neighborhood kids
Junior high school student, Bathgate Avenue.
Cambodian Buddhist Monastery in the South Bronx
The Martin Luther King, Jr. Health Clinic had a milk program for the children of the neighborhood
African-American congregation in front of church.
One of the high school students told me she was going to be a dental assistant. The other two said they wanted to be models.
Mel Rosenthal in his old bedroom in the South Bronx
Among the last residents, [an] African-American boy standing in rubble, his "neighborhood," with abandoned buildings in the background.
When I looked for her to give her the picture, her building had burned and she had moved
South Bronx site of the 1980 "People's Convention" in opposition to the Democratic Party's nominating convention downtown
"Mourn the victims, stand for peace"
A Child's Playground. Bathgate Avenue
Girls posing in front of the Junior High School on Third Avenue
South of Cross Bronx Expressway, decals belie the truth of destruction for suburban commuters.
Mikey at the bar, next to my photographs. I loved hanging out, having a beer, taking pictures, listening to what people said about the neighbor-hood. People were open and generous with me