Phoenix's Black Residents Trade Sense Of Community For American Dream

As middle and upper class black families increasingly move to the suburbs of Phoenix, they must cope with the loss of cultural connections that existed in historically black neighborhoods.

1 minute read

February 28, 2007, 8:00 AM PST

By Christian Madera @http://www.twitter.com/cpmadera


"Bari-Ellen Ross moved to a gated neighborhood in the Phoenix suburb of Litchfield Park from the East Coast four years ago. Newly married and adventurous, she and her husband, Charles, left their corporate jobs to start a new life.

But once the moving boxes were unpacked, culture shock set in for the black couple. It was rare to run into people who looked like them. And where were the jazz clubs, the soul-food restaurants and black beauty salons?"

" 'I've settled into the mentality that that part of my life, that intimacy with my culture, is gone,' Bari-Ellen, 54, said."

"The Rosses' experience is beginning to define what it's like to be black in metropolitan Phoenix as the area's growing black population evolves from a tight-knit community concentrated mostly in south Phoenix into a patchwork scattered throughout the area."

Monday, February 26, 2007 in Tucson Citizen

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