Saturday, June 21, 2025

When We Fail to Learn from History: Donald Dokins, Robert “Yummy” Sandifer, and the Tragedy of Lost Youth


                  

Neri,G DuBurk,Randy (2010) Yummy: the Last Days of a Southside Shorty. Paperback | Lee & Low Press | ISBN-13:978-1584302674 | $12.20 USD | 96 Pages


In June of 2013, 15-year-old Donald Ray Dokins was sentenced to 90 years to life for murder and attempted murder in connection with a gang shooting that took place in Watts, California. Dokins, a member of the Fudgetown Mafia Crips, was reportedly aiming for a rival gang member, Mauro Cortez, but instead struck and killed Cortez's 1-year-old son, Angel Cortez Nava, and injured the father.

The story is gruesome and heartbreaking. But unfortunately, it's far from unique.

This wasn’t the first time America watched a young boy take a life in the name of gang loyalty nor the first time a community was left grappling with grief and blame. Almost two decades earlier, in 1994, a similar tragedy occurred in Chicago, Illinois, one that shocked the nation and has remained a painful example of youth lost to violence.


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Donald Ray Dokins (16 yrs. old) turn to his lawyer after being sentence to 90 years – life for accidentally shooting a 1 year old boy in a gang shooting.

Robert “Yummy” Sandifer: A Short Life, A Long Shadow

Before Donald Dokins, there was Robert “Yummy” Sandifer an 11-year-old boy caught up in the chaos of Chicago’s gang war. His story was immortalized in the powerful graphic novel, Yummy: The Last Days of a Southside Shorty, which I couldn’t put down and still recommend to this day.

Yummy’s upbringing was a recipe for disaster: he was raised by his grandmother, often in a crowded house with up to 19 other children. His mother was addicted to drugs, and his father was incarcerated. Abuse was a regular part of his early life—he was reportedly beaten and burned with cigarettes. He began racking up arrests at a very young age, yet kept getting released back into the same toxic environment.

In 1994, while trying to prove himself to the Black Disciples gang, Yummy opened fire at rival gang members in his neighborhood. Instead, he hit and killed 14-year-old Shavon Dean, an old friend. That one mistake launched a media frenzy. His photo round face, small frame, eyes full of pain was broadcast on every major network. The nation watched as police searched for a child killer.






Betrayed by His Own

Yummy went into hiding. Two fellow gang members, brothers Craig (16) and Derrick Hardaway (14), offered to take him to safety. But instead of helping him escape, they took him to a grassy underpass and shot him twice in the head on orders from their leaders.

Yummy was killed by the same gang he had tried to impress. Betrayed by the only family he knew.

 

                           



Who’s to Blame?

After Yummy’s death, the blame game began:

  • Neighbors blamed the abusive home and absent parents.

  • The media blamed the state for repeatedly turning him loose after arrests.

  • Judges blamed the laws that allowed gangs to exploit minors, knowing they couldn’t be tried as adults.

Was Yummy a monster? Or was he the result of a system that failed him again and again?

The Cycle Continues

Fast forward to 2013, and again in 2025, and the same headlines echo across American cities from Watts to West Philly. Recently in my hometown of Philadelphia, youth gun violence continues to take innocent lives:

  • A fatal shooting during a music video shoot.

  • A deadly incident in Upper Darby.

  • A double shooting inside a West Philly corner store.

These aren’t just statistics. These are real children, caught in real cycles of violence and trauma. Boys like Donald and Yummy didn’t just wake up one day and decide to destroy lives. They were raised in communities riddled with poverty, neglect, abuse, and a total lack of resources where gangs become surrogate families, and guns become the only form of power.

Learning from the Past

I use Yummy: The Last Days of a Southside Shorty in my youth book club discussions as a powerful deterrent to gang culture and street violence. Teenagers relate to Yummy not because they’re violent, but because they understand pain, fear, and the hunger for belonging.

This book reminds them and us that the choices these boys made didn’t come from nowhere. And that if we don’t interrupt these cycles early with love, structure, resources, and mentorship then history will keep repeating itself.

Final Thoughts

Donald Ray Dokins. Robert Sandifer. Shavon Dean. Angel Cortez Nava. These names tell a story of young lives some lost to bullets, others to prison cells.

If we don’t look deeper than the crimes if we don’t address the root causes, if we don’t support these kids before it’s too late we will continue to mourn more “Yummys,” more Donalds, more Angels.

Let this be more than a tragic story. Let it be a wake-up call.

Overall, this book is a classic.

— Mr. Philly Librarian









Friday, June 13, 2025

The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration by Isabel Wilkerson




Wilkerson,Isabel.(2011) The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America's Great Migration. Hardback | Vintage Press  |  ISBN 13:978-0679763888   |  $12.66  | 640 Pages



The Warmth of Other Suns is a skillfully written masterpiece by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Isabel Wilkerson, chronicling what she calls “the most unreported story of the twentieth century”: the early 20th-century migration of African Americans out of the South. In 1910, 90% of African Americans lived in the South. During the Great Migration, millions relocated to urban centers in the North and West—including Philadelphia in search of jobs, an escape from racial prejudice, and the hope of a better life. But one question remained: Did they find what they were looking for?

Wilkerson spent over ten years researching this book, interviewing more than 1,200 people. Out of those, she selected three dozen for in-depth interviews and chose three key individuals to anchor the book’s powerful narrative.

She tells the stories of:

  • Ida Mae Gladney, who left the cotton fields of Mississippi in 1937 and moved to Chicago.

  • George Starling, who fled Florida in 1945 after standing up to racism and started anew in Harlem, New York.

  • Robert Foster, who left Louisiana in 1953 to become a doctor and ultimately served as Ray Charles’s personal physician.

This is one of the most compelling books I’ve read this year. It’s still in high demand at the Free Library of Philadelphia and is a perfect choice for book clubs of all ages. Reading it answered some of my own questions about my family's migration—on my grandmother’s side, from Maysville, South Carolina to Philadelphia, and on my grandfather’s side, from Dendron, Virginia (Surry County), also to Philadelphia.

Wilkerson also makes it clear that not everyone left the South simply looking for opportunity many were forced out. Under the brutality of Jim Crow, people fled for their lives, sometimes abandoning land, homes, and everything familiar in the middle of the night to escape violence and protect loved ones.

Overall, this book is a classic.

Mr. Philly Librarian








NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE AWARD WINNER
LYNTON HISTORY PRIZE WINNER
HEARTLAND AWARD WINNER
DAYTON LITERARY PEACE PRIZE FINALIST

NAMED ONE OF THE TEN BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY
The New York Times • USA Today • O: The Oprah Magazine • Amazon • Publishers Weekly • Salon • Newsday • The Daily Beast


NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY
The New Yorker • The Washington Post • The Economist • Boston Globe • San Francisco Chronicle • Chicago Tribune • Entertainment Weekly • Philadelphia Inquirer • The Guardian • The Seattle Times • St. Louis Post-Dispatch • The Christian Science Monitor


A family from Florida moving to the North
























Saturday, June 7, 2025

D2 Basketball Is Not All That Bad After All!

D2 Basketball Is Not All That Bad After All!

Published: January 11, 2012
By: Mr. Philly Librarian

When people think of college basketball, Division I programs often steal the spotlight. But Malcolm Ingram, a standout player at Philadelphia University, proves that success, growth, and recognition are just as attainable in Division II.

I caught up with Malcolm, who took some time to reflect on his journey, his achievements, and what the future holds. This is a story of hard work, determination, and making the most of every opportunity.


A Breakout Junior Season

Malcolm’s junior year was one to remember. Here's a quick look at his standout accomplishments:

  • Daktronics NCAA Division II East All-Region 2nd Team

  • ECAC 2nd Team All-Star

  • CACC All-Tournament Team and CACC 1st Team All-Conference

  • CACC Player of the Week for scoring his 1,000th career point

  • CACC Honorable Mentions throughout the season

  • Featured as “Star of the Report” in the D2 East Weekly

  • CACC Winter All-Academic Team member

  • Averaged 15.6 points and 8.4 rebounds per game

  • Started all 31 games and added 43 assists, 23 steals




Q&A: Getting to Know Malcolm Ingram

1. How did you get started with basketball? Who inspired you?

Surprisingly, I was a competitive swimmer growing up. Basketball started out as something fun with friends. My biggest influences were my brother, Jordan Ingram (Archbishop John Carroll), and Troy Roundtree (Northeast High School).

2. Where are you from, and where did you play?

I grew up in the Wynnefield section of Philadelphia. I attended Central High School and then transferred to Solebury School for my final year. I’m currently finishing my senior year at Philadelphia University.

3. Which players do you look up to?

I look up to successful undersized power forwards — guys like Bernard King, Leon Powe, Jason Maxiell, Paul Millsap, and Brandon Bass.

4. Why Philly U? Were any D1 schools recruiting you?

Philly U felt like the right place. Coach Herb Magee is a legend, and the program has a winning history. Schools like Rider, Boston U, and New Hampshire showed some interest, but it wasn’t serious until later in my senior year.

5. Are you surprised by your team’s success?

Not really. We’re built on hard work, and that’s driven all the success we’ve had.

6. What’s your off-season training like?

My days usually start with running from 8–9 a.m., followed by weight training from 10–11:30. After lunch, I hit the court from 12–2, and sometimes again from 5–6:30, depending on how I feel.

7. What’s next for you after college?

I’m aiming to finish strong this season. After graduation, I plan to take the LSAT and apply to law schools. I'm also applying for a Fulbright Scholarship to do research in Argentina — fingers crossed!

8. Who’s the toughest competition you’ve faced?

Tyreke Evans and Nasir Robinson. We played American Christian twice while I was at Solebury, and they were tough games. Tyreke could do whatever he wanted on the court, and Nasir was just a beast to guard — strong, quick, athletic.

9. Last book you read?

Campus CEO by Randall Pinkett.


Final Thoughts

Malcolm Ingram is a great example of how talent, grit, and vision can thrive in any division. His story reminds us that where you play doesn't define your potential — how you play does.

Stay tuned — Malcolm’s journey is far from over.