Faces
Behind the Windows:
Life in the Inner City
Childhood dreams didn't exist in Lesra Martin's world, a place where day to
day survival was a grim reality. Born in 1963, he was the second eldest son
out of Earl and Alma Martin's eight children. Although the family was poor,
his parents managed to instill in him a sense of responsibility and hard work.
But his father's ill health, his parents' drinking problems, and a series
of family misfortunes eventually pushed the Martins from a comfortable, middle
class life in Queens on to welfare, and the dangerous, nightmare streets of
Bushwick.
By age 10, Lesra's family depended on his job bagging groceries to buy food.
At 11, the malnourished kid with the toothy, ragged grin was working in a
bar, sweeping floors and saving his tips to buy extra rice and beans for his
siblings. Life was a relentless day-to-day struggle, a balance between
hope and despair. Gang life literally consumed Lesra's oldest brother,
and by his teens, Lesra faced much the same bleak future.
The Day That Changed His Life
In July, 1979, Lesra, accompanied by his father to show him the way, hopped
on to a subway train and journeyed to a new summer job at a Brooklyn environmental
lab. Lesra was befriended by a group of Canadian entrepreneurs who were visiting
the lab. Attracted to his "....spark and light and curiosity..." they
saw a bright kid bursting with potential who had few real opportunities in
life. Their unexpected friendship sparked an incredible saga that would
take Lesra out of the inner city and into a new life in Canada where he would
face one of the most painful challenges of his life.
In spite of their many hardships and burdens, the Martin family was held together
by a deep and enduring bond. Lesra will never forget the look of pain on his
parents' faces when they were faced with an agonizing choice: to keep him
in Bushwick with his family, where gangs, prison, or drugs would eventually
rob him of a future; or to allow him to accompany a group of strangers to
a foreign land with the promise of helping him further his education. Lesra
was torn between the generous offer and the responsibility he felt towards
his family. Yet he wanted to leave, and ultimately, his parents found
the courage to let him go.
A New Life
Lesra arrived in Toronto in the fall of 1979, hopeful about his new life.
It didn't take long for his tutor to discover that Lesra was functionally
illiterate. Thus, began Lesra's incredible, pain-filled journey to learn to
read and write. Bolstered by the Canadians' compassion and dedicated commitment,
he spent the next several years fighting the devastating psychological and
emotional scars that stemmed from his life of poverty in the ghetto. For
years, he was tormented by inner voices that told him he was "too dumb and
stupid" to learn. He was afraid of books, afraid of words.
Along the way, Lesra found the courage to face his fears, inspired in part
by "The Sixteenth Round", Rubin Carter's searing account of his wrongful
imprisonment for the 1966 murders of three New Jersey residents. Taking heart
from Carter's spirit in the face of extreme adversity, Lesra wrote the boxer,
setting into motion a friendship between himself, Carter, and the Canadians
that led to a five year fight that helped win Carter's release from prison
in November, 1985. By then, Carter had spent nearly 20 years in jail. That
unique, fateful friendship between Carter, Lesra, and the Canadians resulted
in the 1992 book "Lazarus and The Hurricane." In turn, the book inspired
the recent Universal movie "The Hurricane."
Dreams Fulfilled
Rubin Carter's book provided the breakthrough Lesra needed in his struggle
for literacy; the Canadians provided the dedication and commitment Lesra needed
to prove himself capable of overcoming his fears. Lesra graduated as an Ontario
Scholar in 1983, then later completed an Honours BA in anthropology at the
University of Toronto in 1988. He studied for his Master's in Sociology at
Dalhousie University. Later, in 1997, he earned his law degree from Dalhousie
Law School. After he articled with a Vancouver law firm, he served as a Crown
Prosecutor (similar to a district attorney) in Kamloops, British Columbia.
In 1995, while attending Dalhousie, he met fellow law student Cheryl Tynes,
a Halifax native. Love grew out of a deeply committed friendship, and they
married in 1998. Cheryl was called to the bar in September, 1999.
The Life He'll Never Forget
"I began a journey at 15," Lesra says, remembering his life in the ghetto,
"a journey to find a consistent pace, a belief I'd live in a safe community,
with food on the table, and the eventual hope that I'd find someone to love.
In the end, it became so much more."
Once, on a 1996 trip to New York to visit his family with Cheryl, Lesra sat
and studied the people on his subway car. Suddenly he felt an overwhelming
sense of fear; what if he hadn't made the subway car on that day back in July,
1979? What if he hadn't met the Canadians? He knew the answer: he'd likely
be in prison or strung out on drugs, or dead.
His parents had many problems; their lives were infused with constant struggle
and hardships. Yet Lesra realized that his parents, by allowing him to leave
the only home and family he knew, gave him a precious gift that brought hope
and optimism.
"I'll never forget who I am and where I came from," he says. "I am who
I am because of my life in the ghetto. I never take anything for granted.
Every day is a gift."
Lesra has changed directions in his own life since the release of the movie
"The Hurricane." He has embarked on a career as a motivational speaker,
appearing before the United Nations, speaking
at "Literacy 2000" hosted by Correctional Services Canada, and was
the keynote speaker for The Council for Exceptional Children symposium
in New Mexico. He has appeared before many community and corporate groups,
and literacy foundations. In April, 2000, he was honoured with an award from
the Council for Exceptional Children.
Between speaking engagements and his hectic schedule, he is working on a book
about his experiences and the devastating effects of illiteracy.
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