• Get in Touch
  • Get in Touch with our Support!
  • Privacy Policy
Sunday, January 29, 2023
OvaNewsBlast.com
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
OvaNewsBlast.com
No Result
View All Result

Classes help Black Americans learn to swim

October 22, 2022
in Sports
Reading Time: 6min read
A A
Classes help Black Americans learn to swim
0
SHARES
4
VIEWS
Share ShareShareShareShareShare

Washington (AFP) – Ten-year-old Aiden Reed had reason to be a little nervous as he dipped into a swimming pool in Washington.

“I almost drowned,” the young African American recalled of an incident at another pool when a lifeguard had to rescue him.

Since then, Aiden has found the courage to face his fears and go back in the pool for lessons with Swim Up, a nonprofit group that offers free classes.

Out of nine new swimmers on a recent October afternoon, eight were African American, a vulnerable group for drowning. In the United States, the drowning rate for Black children ages five to nine is 2.6 times higher than that of white children, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For Black children ages 10-14, drowning rates are 3.6 times higher, the CDC says.

Some 64 percent of Black children know little or nothing about swimming, compared to 40 percent of white children, according to USA Swimming, a national federation.

Mary Bergstrom, a cofounder of Swim Up, offers a lesson to Black youth in Washington Agnes BUN AFP Photo

A tragedy in August 2010 brutally illustrated the situation. During a barbecue with friends in Shreveport, Louisiana, DeKendrix Warner, a Black teenager, waded into shallow water in the Red River.

He didn’t know how to swim. Neither did the six friends and cousins who went in to try to save him. Warner slipped and plunged into a pool of much deeper water. A passerby jumped in and saved him but the six others had also followed him into the deep water. Family members on shore, who couldn’t swim, watched helplessly.

DeKendrix survived, but the six teenagers, aged 13 to 18, all drowned.

Closed swimming pools

In the United States, there is no federal requirement to teach swimming in schools. The reason so many Black children don’t know how to swim, though, is rooted in the history of slavery and racial inequality, according to activists and historians.

Black children in the United States drown at a rate some three times higher than white children, experts say
Black children in the United States drown at a rate some three times higher than white children, experts say Agnes BUN AFP Photo

“Enslaved Africans could escape slavery with swimming skills,” said Ebony Rosemond, executive director of Black Kids Swim, an organization that helps African American youth learn to swim.

“It was in the best interest of those who owned humans to make sure that they didn’t have the skill, or that they were too afraid to jump into the water,” she said.

After the abolition of slavery in 1865, white supremacists terrorized African Americans, “lynching them, brutalizing them, and hanging their bodies near bodies of water,” Rosemond added.

With the civil rights movement came desegregation. Courts ordered cities to open their public pools to Black people. But many, especially in the South, chose to close them instead, said historian Jeff Wiltse of the University of Montana, author of “A Social History of Swimming Pools in America.”

An athlete from Howard University, a predominantly Black school in Washington, takes part in a recent swimming and diving meet
An athlete from Howard University, a predominantly Black school in Washington, takes part in a recent swimming and diving meet Agnes BUN AFP Photo

Such racial discrimination “severely restricted Black Americans’ access” to pools, he summarized in a 2014 article. “Swimming never became integral to Black Americans’ recreation and sports culture and was not passed down from generation to generation.”

‘It’s cold!’

Today, many initiatives are trying to correct this, like Swim Up.

Mary Bergstrom, a cofounder, handed out caps and swim shorts to kids one recent afternoon. “Get in the water,” she urged. One of them jumped in and yelled, “It’s cold!”

The kids learn skills step by step. First, they float on their backs, then kick their feet to move forward, arms outstretched, guided by Bergstrom, a lawyer and former competitive swimmer.

Some spectators stand to encourage Howard University swimmers at a recent meet that was the most attended aquatics competition in school history
Some spectators stand to encourage Howard University swimmers at a recent meet that was the most attended aquatics competition in school history Agnes BUN AFP Photo

Aiden, his fear of the water a thing of the past, floats easily. One of his distracted buddies forgets to breathe, and Bergstrom gently pats his head to get him to take a breath of air.

“We are almost at 100 kids that we’ve kind of taught to swim or kind of got them over their fear of the water,” Bergstrom said.

“Eventually our goal is to… put this into schools, and it can be burden-free on families. You can make it a part of the curriculum, and you can make a difference,” she said.

Not far from the pool is Howard University, the only historically Black university in the United States with a competitive swim team, whose swimmers sometimes give lessons to Swim Up youth.

On October 1, they entered Burr Gymnasium to thunderous applause as they took on rival Georgetown. About 1,200 people were attending the event, which was designed by their coach, Nick Askew, to raise the profile of Black swimmers.

“We can create a fan experience like none other, the fact that we can also back it up with some amazing swims… is one of the things… a lot of people will grab on to, and make them more encouraged to touch the water, to learn how to swim,” Askew told AFP.

Howard University swim coach Nick Askew hopes to draw more Black athletes 'to touch the water, to learn how to swim'
Howard University swim coach Nick Askew hopes to draw more Black athletes ‘to touch the water, to learn how to swim’ Agnes BUN AFP Photo

The Howard Bisons held their own, although both the male and female teams lost to their Georgetown competitors.

Niles Rankin, a 21-year-old competitive swimmer at Howard, said coach Askew has a goal for his athletes.

“He wanted us to get our name out there to kind of be like, I guess, a symbol for other Black swimmers,” he said.

“You can do it… You can be a Black swimmer.”

© 2022 AFP

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendSharePinShare
Previous Post

A spate of drownings: Classes help Black Americans learn to swim

Next Post

Amid FX Supply Crunch, Naira Falls at I&E, P2P, Black Market

Next Post
Amid FX Supply Crunch, Naira Falls at I&E, P2P, Black Market

Amid FX Supply Crunch, Naira Falls at I&E, P2P, Black Market

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
7-Year-Old Black Boy Writes His First Book About a Superhero Who Loves Making the World a Safer Place

7-Year-Old Writes First Book About Superhero Who Loves Making the World a Safer Place

January 15, 2023
Tyler Perry’s Sistas’ Devale Ellis and Crystal Hayslett Trumpet ‘Zatima’ — Plus, Get the Season 3B Premiere Date

Tyler Perry’s Sistas’ Devale Ellis and Crystal Hayslett Trumpet ‘Zatima’ — Plus, Get the Season 3B Premiere Date

August 25, 2021
Summerguide calendar | Summerguide | Illinois Times

Summerguide calendar | Summerguide | Illinois Times

May 26, 2022
Demonstrators support harassed owners of Black Lives Matter stand near Murrieta – Press Enterprise

Demonstrators support harassed owners of Black Lives Matter stand near Murrieta – Press Enterprise

September 27, 2020
Howard School of Business Is Ranked Among Bloomberg Businessweek’s Best Business Schools of 2022-23

Howard School of Business Is Ranked Among Bloomberg Businessweek’s Best Business Schools of 2022-23

September 22, 2022
Yolo County’s Juneteenth celebration goes virtual on June 6 – Daily Democrat

New exhibit at Gallery 625, DMTC to hold 12th Valentine Dessert Auction

January 29, 2023
Critical Carceral Studies Lab receives grants to continue abolitionist work | News

Critical Carceral Studies Lab receives grants to continue abolitionist work | News

January 29, 2023
Charleston’s International African American Museum offers programs ahead of opening | Business

Charleston’s International African American Museum offers programs ahead of opening | Business

January 29, 2023
Usain Bolt Fires His Business Manager — And It Was Not An Amicable Split

Usain Bolt Fires His Business Manager — And It Was Not An Amicable Split

January 29, 2023
Gregory Allen Howard who wrote ‘Remember the Titans’ dies

Gregory Allen Howard who wrote ‘Remember the Titans’ dies

January 29, 2023

Recent News

Focus on NFL Star’s Care Belies Medical Racism in U.S.

Focus on NFL Star’s Care Belies Medical Racism in U.S.

January 25, 2023
Omaha program uses HIE tech to improve postpartum care for minority parents and children

Omaha program uses HIE tech to improve postpartum care for minority parents and children

January 26, 2023
Stephen Dorff says ‘nobody will remember garbage superhero movies’ | Entertainment

Stephen Dorff says ‘nobody will remember garbage superhero movies’ | Entertainment

January 27, 2023
Feb 17 | History Happy Hour: Martin Luther King’s Vision of Democracy

Feb 17 | History Happy Hour: Martin Luther King’s Vision of Democracy

January 27, 2023
OvaNewsBlast.com

A reliable source for African American news, from a different lens. Yours. News about us, by us.

Follow Us

Recent News

Yolo County’s Juneteenth celebration goes virtual on June 6 – Daily Democrat

New exhibit at Gallery 625, DMTC to hold 12th Valentine Dessert Auction

January 29, 2023
Critical Carceral Studies Lab receives grants to continue abolitionist work | News

Critical Carceral Studies Lab receives grants to continue abolitionist work | News

January 29, 2023

Topics to cover !

  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • News
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Get in Touch
  • Get in Touch with our Support!
  • Privacy Policy

© 2020 ovanewsblast.com - All rights reserved!   Download Our App   Read News on odbnewsblast.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • African Americans
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Entertainment

© 2020 ovanewsblast.com - All rights reserved!   Download Our App   Read News on odbnewsblast.com