Teens clean up the rubble in order to create a neighborhood garden.
When I looked for her to give her the picture, her building had burned and she had moved
Junior high school student, Bathgate Avenue.
Girls posing in front of the Junior High School on Third Avenue
Large, four foot, poster on the side of a building.
Candido with neighborhood kids
She had been left behind when her family and friends moved out of the neighborhood
Deserted, desolated buildings: "War Zone"
Life carries on in the War Zone
Doll laying in empty lot filled with rubble
The Martin Luther King, Jr. Health Clinic had a milk program for the children of the neighborhood
Priest and teens on sidewalk with African- American woman walking by
Mother and daughter pause in the ruins, which is still their home, Claremont Parkway.
South of Cross Bronx Expressway, decals belie the truth of destruction for suburban commuters.
Storefronts on East 173rd Street. One with a German Shepard behind the roll-down gate.
Among the Last Residents, their playground: Bathgate Avenue and East 173rd Street.
Among the last residents, [an] African-American boy standing in rubble, his "neighborhood," with abandoned buildings in the background.
South Bronx site of the 1980 "People's Convention" in opposition to the Democratic Party's nominating convention downtown
Near Bathgate Avenue and East 173rd Street.
Young girl at a fire hydrant on the sidewalk