Family members, neighbors, friends and antiviolence groups gathered at a Brooklyn playground this week to memorialize Troy Gill, the 13-year-old boy shot and killed while walking home from a basketball game last week.
But the gathering took on a more urgent tone than the typical tearful remembrances for victims of fatal shootings. Gill is the fifth person to die as a result of gun violence in Crown Heights so far this year, and is also the youngest victim citywide so far. Activists as well as Gill’s family and friends issued a call to action.
โYou should want life for your brother the same way you want life for yourself,โ said Mubarak โBlessโ Ahmad, a member of the antiviolence group Save Our Streets. He stood next to Gillโs mother Mary Culbertson, who was racked with tears during the Tuesday night vigil.
โThis is unacceptable. Crown Heights is crying,โ Ahmad said.
Police said on Wednesday that they were still investigating details of Gillโs shooting, including who he was with and where he may have been going after attending a Brooklyn Nets Game at the Barclays Center last Thursday night.
Neighbors and violence interrupters werenโt waiting for the NYPD to diagnose the problem, though, and appealed directly to young people in the crowd.
โItโs only two ways: Yaโll gonna die, or yaโll going to jail,โ Save Our Streets member Gloria Cutler shouted into a megaphone. โWe want better for yaโll… We care. So get it together, please.โ
She implored the kids who had assembled to get involved in programs at the Save Our Streets center on nearby Kingston Street, and warned them about what could happen if they chose violent paths.
Gillโs stepfather Joseph Ward told the crowd that the teen was killed just as he was beginning to get involved with Save Our Streets.
โThey were trying to get him to volunteer, trying to get him some work,โ Ward said. โSo this is crazy.โ
Anthony Rowe, the project director of Save Our Streets’ Brooklyn-based parent…
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