
"This is a model for what can happen," said Jane Golden, executive director of Mural Arts of Philadelphia. She was there in 1989 to paint the Stop The Violence Mural at 20th and Fernon streets and was there last summer when the community expressed outrage when the mural was destroyed.
"Most of the names up there were individuals that we knew who lived right here, this community," says Tracey Anderson, who lives just blocks from the anti-violence mural. It carried the names of 46 youth taken by gun violence in the area during the height of the crack epidemic.
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The block is a memorial to that time in many ways.
The nearby Ralph Brooks Tot Lot is named after a six-year-old victim of a 1988 drug related shooting.
"Certainly if I had to do all over again- I would have found a way to reach out to the community first," said Steve Brown, a developer with Urban Living.
He says he donated $8,000 to help replace the mural, which was damaged while he was renovating the home at that corner. He and the new homeowner worked with Mural Arts and the City of Philadelphia, which matched the donation to rebuild the three story mural.
The new mural, designed by artist Felix St. Fort, embodies the original and includes the victim names, but brings a more modern feel.
"We want to keep their legacies alive, we want to keep their names alive," said Johnson.
Mural Arts is holding a community paint day on Monday for Martin Luther King Jr. Day of Service at the Dixon House, located at 1920 S. 20th Street in Point Breeze.
The mural should be complete this spring.