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TROOP 1500
University
of Texas
Their mothers may be convicted prostitutes, thieves, murderers and drug
dealers, but the girls of Girl Scout Troop 1500 want to be doctors, lawyers,
veterinarians, social workers and marine biologists.
Working to break the cycle of crime within families and make these dreams
come true are the Lone Star Girl Scout Council, The University of Texas
at Austin School of Social Work, the Crime Prevention Institute and the
YWCA.
Dr. Darlene Grant, of the university¹s School of Social Work, is surrounded
by girls of Troop 1500. Current estimates indicate that 1.3 to 1.5 million
children in the United States have an incarcerated parent, said Dr. Darlene
Grant, associate professor of social work and associate dean of graduate
studies at the university. These vulnerable children face unique difficulties
and their growing numbers and special needs demand attention.
Austin's Enterprising Girl Scouts Beyond Bars Troop 1500 was established
in 1998 using a Maryland venture as a model for a visiting program for
women in prison and their daughters. There are more than 30 such programs
in the country and only two in Texas.
Troop 1500 will be the subject of a PBS documentary by Ellen Spiro of
the College of Communication to air next year.
"Despite the fact that they are in prison, mothers are still important
influences in these girls' lives," said Grant, who has been evaluator
of Troop 1500 since its inception. "But bonds have been broken, and the
program works to rebuild the relationships."
"I think the biggest fear for most mothers in prison is that their child
will also end up there."
There are 45 girls, ranging in age from 6 to 17, registered in Troop 1500.
When mothers get out of prison, their girls become "alumni" and most still
attend select meetings acting as big sisters, said Julia Cuba, troop leader
and coordinator. Now a graduate student in the School of Social Work,
Cuba was hired by the Girl Scouts to help start the Beyond Bars program
in Austin.
Troop Leader and coordinator Julia Cuba listens to Girl Scouts in Troop
1500. According to research conducted by Grant, the number of female prison
inmates has skyrocketed since 1980 and 80 percent of women in prison have
daughters. Ninety percent of these women are single parents and two-thirds
of women in prison in the U.S. are women of color.
Their daughters are six times more likely to land in the juvenile justice
system than children whose parents have not been in jail, Grant said.
These at-risk adolescent girls have identity and self-esteem issues as
well as the need to work through anger they may feel at being abandoned.
Giving women in prison the chance to spend time with their daughters also
helps the mothers. The warden at Gatesville Hilltop Prison (90 miles northeast
of Austin) reports that the behavior of the women involved in the program
has improved.
The girls of local Troop 1500 sell cookies in February and occasionally
go on camp outs, but this is where similarities to other Girl Scout troops
end.
The troop meets three times a month. A licensed therapist from the YWCA
conducts group therapy at a meeting held at the School of Social Work
the second Wednesday of the month.
The girls' big excursion together is a once-a-month trip to Gatesville
to visit their mothers in prison. The mothers and daughters share a meal,
do each other's nails, sometimes have a facial and generally catch up.
Then, they get down to the real business at hand: team building, literacy
curriculum, decision-making curriculum, communication-building skills
work, life skills activities and group therapy.
"There's a lot of hugging, kissing and tears," said Grant. "The girls
crave the love of a mother that other family members might berate."
Ellen Spiro's documentary on Troop 1500 is being filmed at the women's
prison in Gatesville. "I worry about how society vilifies these women
and especially how that affects the girls," she said.
Since the drop-out rate for adolescents with incarcerated parents is high,
the program also teaches the girls about the importance of staying in
school and also how to avoid early pregnancy and lessons in substance
abuse prevention.
"And social skills like not yelling at potential Girl Scout cookie customers!" said Grant.
"We want to make sure these girls get all the resources they need to stay
out of prison themselves," said Cuba. "Prison wrecks your life. It taints
records, closes doors to career building and acts as a substitute for
a much needed mental health system in Texas."
Statistics for Troop 1500 are encouraging: 96 percent of the 45 girls
have not been pregnant before the age of 18; 93 percent have not dropped
out of school and 100 percent have not been arrested.
The Beyond Bars program also provides support to guardians (grandmothers
and other relatives) who are caring for the daughters. And, it helps prepare
and support mothers in making the difficult transition from prison to
the outside world on that day she is given $50 and a set of street clothes
and released.
Troop 1500 caught the attention of Spiro, an award-winning film producer
from the university, who is directing the PBS documentary. Her films,
including "Diana¹s Hair Ego," "Roam Sweet Home" and "Atomic Ed and the
Black Hole," have been broadcast nationally and around the world.
Spiro is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, and she has won two
Rockefeller Fellowships for her films. Karen Bernstein, who won a national
prime time Emmy Award for Ella Fitzgerald's Some thing to Live For, is
producing the documentary.
For the documentary, girls interview their own mothers. Photo courtesy
Ellen Spiro The girls are not only the subjects of the film, "Troop 1500" but also work as crew members. The documentary is funded by the Texas
Council on the Humanities and PBS and is scheduled to air in 2005.
Grant and Cuba are writing a companion book for the film.
"I began my involvement with the troop as a volunteer," said Spiro. She
then started conducting media workshops with the girls training them to
use cameras and editing systems so they could understand, in a hands-on
way, the power of media representation.
"They are now empowered by the process and are currently taking active
roles in the production as cinematographers and interviewers," said Spiro.
The girls, in fact, are conducting interviews with their own mothers,
which has been a transforming experience, Spiro added.
"Rather than being the mere subject of the camera's gaze," she said, "they
are using the cameras in ways that give them the power to ask really difficult
questions of their mothers."
The mothers, on the other hand, have been amazingly receptive to the
process and seem to want the opportunity to share honest and serious concerns
with their daughters.
In a promotional trailer for the documentary, the girls ask their mothers
questions like: Why did you start selling drugs again after you had spent
time in jail?² ³Do you think you¹ll be better when you get out? What
did you think the first night you were in prison? Were you around drugs
when you were little?
Comments by mothers are equally poignant. "She was six years old when
I was locked up, and it probably turned her world up side down," said
one woman, who is serving a life sentence for euthanasia.
At a recent meeting, girls learned how to make masks from guest artist
Benné Rockett. "It doesn't mean you can¹t be a mother or parent because
you are locked behind bars," said another woman serving time for organized
crime activities. "I think the only way you stop being a parent is when
you are dead and six feet under."
The only problem with this program is that there are not more of them,
said Spiro. But resources are slim and we hope that our documentary will
change that and help it grow.
Girls are not only learning how to build relationships with their moms,
but also learning how their mothers made bad choices and how they can
make different choices.
Most of the stories are heart wrenching. One girl's mother has been in
prison five different times. Another 14-year-old girl¹s grandmother became
ill and went into a coma. The girl had to move in with an abusive cousin who
would not give the girl her medication and she reacted with severe depression
and anger, Cuba said.
It didn't help that when we went to visit the mother at Gatesville, she
turned to her daughter and said, OEI got to get pregnant again so I can
have me a pretty one!
"The girl cried the whole way home and tried to commit suicide several
times that year," Cuba said.
She desperately needs the support of a consistent, loving family and friend
network, Cuba added.
"She is slowly building that at a new home with a different cousin," she
said, adding that troop leaders and mentors have increased the amount
of attention they are giving the girl, and she has been given leadership
roles within the troop to build her self-esteem.
Darlene Grant gets her hair braided by girls of Troop 1500. "Her grades
are good, she has lost weight from eating better and exercising, and she
reads a book a week," said Cuba. "Her education will save her life."
In addition to therapy at the Wednesday evening meetings, the troop is
often treated to guest lecturers and themed parties. On one occasion,
the girls heard from a self-defense instructor and at a recent meeting,
local guest artist Benné Rockett from IDEA Gallery helped the girls make
masks. These will be part of an exhibit at the gallery, at 701 Tillery
St., on May 8.
Members of the Austin Junior League became volunteers for the troop this
year and attend meetings and go on the Gatesville trips.
"They are also acting as mentors, and I think the volunteers and the girls
have learned a lot from one another about people from different walks
of life," said Cuba, adding that many social work students also volunteer
to work with the girls.
In addition to the prison visit, the girls take other field trips once
a month sometimes back to the university where they interact with college
students.
"We challenge the girls to meet new students and find out what they are
studying, what classes they like and dislike and what they plan to do
with their degrees," Cuba said. "These kinds of interactions familiarize
the girls with higher education opportunities and let them see the diverse
group of people who are striving for careers and why.
"The hope is the more they are exposed to higher learning, the more natural
the idea will be in their lives."
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