Our Mission - 7 E's

  1. Evangelism: We teach parents, civic leaders, church leaders, and others how to reach young black men.
  2. Edification: We build up and challenge young men to be strong, moral leaders.
  3. Exhortation: We encourage young black men through the vicissitudes of life.
  4. Education: We strongly advise young men to pursue higher education.
  5. Entrepreneurship: We teach young men how to generate a good income, be good businessmen, and handle their money.
  6. Enthusiasm: We share with young men a positive way of life, a life that they can be enthusiastic and excited about, instead of depressed and defeated.
  7. Enduring Legacy: We challenge young men to not only live life well, but to leave a rich heritage behind for their sons and daughters and the community in which they live.

Reaching Young Black Men To Make Black America Better

A Very Horrifying, But True, Statistic

One out of every three young black men in America today is in prison, in jail, on probation, or on parole, a statistic so overwhelming it defies rational explanation. In his powerful new book, Race to Incarcerate, Marc Mauer, of the Sentencing Project reveals that in 1995, according to the federal government's own studies, African-Americans made up 13 percent of the population and 15 percent of all drug users, yet they comprised 33 percent of people arrested, 55 percent of those convicted, and 74 percent of those sentenced to prison for drug possession.

When total incarceration rates are estimated separately by age group, black males in their twenties and thirties are found to have high rates relative to other groups. Among the more than 2.1 million offenders incarcerated on June 30, 2004, an estimated 576,600 WERE BLACK MALES BETWEEN AGES 20 AND 39.

Among males age 25 to 29, 12.6% of blacks were in prison or jail, compared to 3.6% of Hispanics and about 1.7% of whites


The National Association To Save Young Black Men
P. O. Box 165046, Irving, TX 75016
817-887-3089 -- fax
info@sybm.org  |  www.sybm.org


© 2005-2007, The National Association To Save Young Black Men, all rights reserved