Tie a tie. Respect a woman. These are just two pieces of fatherly advice handed down recently
to a group of young men at the Men II Boys Film and Lecture Tour, hosted at the Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg School of Public Health and sponsored by the Center for Adolescent Health, Center for the
Prevention of Youth Violence and Urban Leadership Institute.
The event brought together 125 male students from Baltimore City schools with leaders in the
African-American community to screen the new documentary Men II Boys and participate in a
community discussion on how to become fathers to the fatherless.
"The film really made me think about how hard it is being a black man in America," said Issac
Joyner, a student at Baltimore's Success Academy.
Men II Boys, directed by D.C.-based filmmaker Janks Morton, discusses the lack of father-to-
son relationships, primarily in the African-American community, and how that absence affects a boy's
ascent into manhood. Morton interviews a range of black men--including Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-Md.),
Baltimore Raven Daniel Wilcox and UMBC president Freeman A. Hrabowski III--and asks them to give
advice to young boys of color. The men also share their own experiences with their fathers and how
having a father around impacted their lives.
The documentary is based on the book 101 Things Every Boy of Color Should Know, written by
LaMarr Darnell Shields, former director of youth support for the Johns Hopkins Center for the
Prevention of Youth Violence and Baltimore City schoolteacher. Shields is now the president of the
Urban Leadership Institute, which consults with corporations and institutions working with at-risk
youth.
"Young black men are so used to hearing what not to do: Don't drop out, don't go to jail," Shields
said. "This book and movie are a way for them to hear from men about what TO do."
As the documentary started, many of the boys talked and horsed around, but the room quickly
drew silent when a wheelchair-bound man, paralyzed from the waist down, began to talk about how his
wrong decision caused him to become a victim of gun violence.
A powerful part of the event was the after-film discussion with Shields and Morton. Several
tears were shed as the boys began to talk about pain, fear and abandonment. Al Watson, a conflict
mediator and panel discussion participant, shared his own personal story about how, when he was
young, his father committed suicide, and how it still affects him today. Even now, he said, he still
searches for advice from older men. "We all need a shoulder to lean on," Watson said.
For more information about Men II Boys and 101 Things Every Boy of Color Should Know, go to
www.mentoboys.com.
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Philip J. Leaf is the director of the Johns Hopkins Center for the Prevention of Youth Violence and a
professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.