By

Anna Werner /

CBS News/ March 20, 2012, 7:11 PM

Making hope amid violence in Chicago's Southside

(CBS News) CHICAGO - On the south side of Chicago, Chicago Lawn is a tough neighborhood. There were five shootings this past weekend alone and there have been eight murders so far this year.

But there is a man who is determined to change that, a U.S. citizen of Palestinian descent. His study of sociology got him interested in the troubled neighborhood, and he decided to move there.

CBS News correspondent Anna Werner reports that for 15 years, Rami Nashashibi has worked to heal the wounds of his Southside neighborhood.

"The violence, the way it punctuates our daily lives is not just the presence of violence, it's the threat of it. It's the threat, it's the insecurity, it's the fear," Nashashibi said.

A Palestinian immigrant, Nashashibi soon came to see that the neighborhood's problems went much deeper than violence - to distrust and tension among the groups living here: Arab Americans, African Americans, and Latinos. So he founded the Inner City Muslim Action League. Its goal is to inspire people to connect with others of different ethnicities and faiths.

"I think that allows people to begin to see that it's bigger than them, that there's more commonality, that the world isn't as alone and you're not as isolated as you thought," Nashashibi said.

The organization's first project was a free medical clinic. The patients Dr. Altaf Kaiseruddin sees here cannot afford insurance - or doctor visits.

"They live their lives in stamping out the fire mode. This is crisis mode. This bill has to be paid, we're gonna skip this bill, eat this time. So this is ongoing hustle, you have to figure out each day, what's gonna happen, and health care? We don't do that," Kaiseruddin said.

Local resident Marie Baker is one of Kaiseruddin's patients.

"When I first became a diabetic I was like, shh! Just shoot me now," Baker said.

Baker now gets checkups, and something more.

"I've never been treated like a number, or a black person, or a green person - just a person," Baker said.

The group's latest effort: getting convenience store owners to offer fresh fruits and vegetables. In a neighborhood with so few grocery stores, it's called a "food desert."

Nashashibi says his vision here is simple: bridge the gaps so that different ethnic groups fight against their common problems, and not each other, something he says that reflects his own need.

"The need to believe that, we can make a change and that, that our communities are capable of more, that real positive change can happen," Nashashibi said. "And if not, a real important part of what it means to be human, I think, dies. In me at least."

In a neighborhood devoid of so many things, Nashashibi says one thing many do have now that they didn't have before is hope.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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credibility2 says:
The elephant in the room is that those perpetuating, causing or accepting the violence is due to a mentality of no self-responsibility or accountability for one's actions. The government has controlled these types by giving them everything they need without requiring any appreciation or accountability. The vast majority of the people suffering from this urban terrorism are decent, law-abiding individuals, but who have nurtured a mentality of silence and not snitching. They have created their own problems by not having any respect for anything of authority or respect for life...their own or that of their neighbors. No amount of rhyming rhetoric, slogans or marches will effect any change, until change comes from within the community on how they raise themselves into fitting in with the rest of a functioning society. IL just had its Primary elections and three politicians currently under investigation for corruption or ethics violations, plus accepting bribes, won their contest easily because their supporters don't care at all about crime. The pols that won include Jesse Jackson Jr., William Beevers and Dwight Smith. One has to wonder what is wrong with the mentality of people that would accept corruption and criminality and support it by voting for the individual. That is why there are problems in these areas.
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smittyc says:
He should fit right in. Another in a long line of "reformers" in Chicago who is going to save everybody. Yeah right, the same tune played by Daley Sr. Daley Jr and a long line of others. The only thing these reformers do is crack your back, get you hooked on drugs and take your money. Next he'll be asking for donations, city money, state funding and federal support.
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bilrobi1 replies:
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And what are you doing?
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skeezix06 says:
I'm all for anyone who tries to take on a bad situation and make it better. Mr. Nashashibi is a very courageous person.
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Jeerzy33888 says:
The news item where a Palestinian tried to help a poor neighborhood in Chicago follows the pattern of AlQueda establishing its presence in the poor Muslim neighborhoods in the Middle East.
Real help might come if one left out the "Muslim" in the title.
That would really be a help for the neighborhood, without the propaganda attached to it.
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