Everyone Into the Water
By LYNN ZINSER
Published: June 19, 2006
(NY Times)
Girls wait to compete at the Asphalt Green's Big Swim recently in New York, part of a program to teach minority children to swim.
FOR at least one day a year, the overwhelmingly white world of swimming gets turned on its ear in places like Asphalt Green, a fitness center tucked away in the Upper East Side of Manhattan. Hundreds of children swarm the pool deck, goggled faces of every hue popping out of the water after triumphantly finishing a lap at the Big Swim, the culmination of a program that fights doggedly to close the sport's racial gap. That divide, born of a slavery-era myth that blacks cannot swim, has created a world where black children drown at rates up to five times higher than white children, and has left competitive swimming bereft of minorities.
"We are putting our finger in one small hole in the dam," said Carol Tweedy, executive director of the Asphalt Green, as she stood among the children, their parents howling encouragement from the bleachers.
Closing the gap is not particularly easy. The factors that fostered it — race, class, tradition, culture — are stubborn, and the solutions are expensive. But the cost of not closing it is measured in lives lost. As public beaches and pools open for the summer, the issue is being addressed on both local and national levels.
A handful of programs like the one in Asphalt Green — which has taught New York City public school second graders to swim for 11 years at no charge — have popped up around the country. This year, USA Swimming, which is in charge of developing the sport as well as the Olympic team, began offering financial support for things like free classes. In April, the organization sent Maritza Correia, the first black woman to make an American Olympic team, in 2004, to Asphalt Green's Big Swim. Earlier this year, USA Swimming also hired its first diversity specialist, John Cruzat, an African-American who grew up in Chicago and most recently worked for the Urban League....
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Although studies have shown that many Africans were avid swimmers when they were brought over as slaves, most slaves born in the United States were not allowed to learn to swim because it was a means of escape. That created generations of nonswimmers and spawned the myth that African-Americans could not swim. Though widely discredited, a 1969 study titled "The Negro and Learning to Swim: The Buoyancy Problem Related to Reported Biological Difference," was printed in The Journal of Negro Education....The problem was compounded by segregation, which kept blacks out of many pools and beaches....
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/06/19/health/healthspecial/19swim.html