March 12, 2010

“When we sentence youth to die in prison, God cries”

By Rabbi Steven Carr Reuben, Ph.D.  |  

Here is an article written by one of our 2007 Unsung Heroes:

Every year as Jews gather on our holy days we remind ourselves that repentance is possible, forgiveness is possible and we pray that our lives do not become defined by our worst moments or our worst acts. In fact, repentance and the recognition that human beings are capable of change is a fundamental Jewish ideal that we have taught for nearly 4,000 years. As a Reconstructionist rabbi I don’t really believe in a God with human emotion, feelings and actions so I’m not sure that God actually cries at the suffering of humanity, but when I learned that in the United States of America there are 2,503 children who are currently sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole, I found my own eyes welling up with tears. How can we tell children, 14, 15, 16 years of age that their lives are over, there is no possibility of redemption, there is no possibility of growth and learning and change – there is only living and dying in prison?

I am a member of Faith Communities for Families and Children and for years have visited youth incarcerated in juvenile hall and in the men’s central jail. I sat with one 14 year old whose life seemed thrown away by the juvenile justice system. He was sleeping in the back seat of a car when someone in the front seat shot a gun out of the window, and even though no one was killed, he ended up being tried as an adult and sent to prison for attempted murder. He is just one of so many and one of the “lucky” ones – his sentence was only 15 years to life. In California, Human Rights Watch estimates that 45 percent of youth offenders serving life without parole were convicted of murder but were not the ones to actually commit the murder. Sadly, California is the worst offender of all, convicting at least 227 children to life in prison without parole, more than any other state in the country. Juvenile incarceration is a social sin – it is throwing our youth away, telling them they are worthless, that in spite of all evidence of common sense and neuroscience to the contrary we are convinced they can never change.

Scientific evidence is clear that there is a significant difference between children and adults, that the teenage brain is significantly different and underdeveloped compared to the adult brain. Do any of us think our 14 or 15 year old children have the same capacity to make intelligent, thoughtful decisions, have the same impulse control, can think and plan ahead with the same rational ability as an adult of 25, or 26, or 27? The idea is absurd, and yet our justice system in California allows prosecutors and judges to try those very same children as if they were adults, and send them to adult prison for the rest of their lives. It is not only cruel and unjust, it is immoral and contrary to the fundamental ethical imperatives of Judaism, Christianity and Islam alike.

Finally there is something being done about it with a proposed law (SB399 “Fair Sentences for Youth Act”) working its way through the legislature in Sacramento that will provide an opportunity for review and resentencing after ten years or more of incarceration for youth sentenced to life without parole in prison. The embarrassing reality is this – the United States is the only country in the world that still sentences children to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

Anthony, a 15 year old stood by in horror as a friend shot another person. Anthony’s minimal participation in what he thought was a robbery of some other kids selling drugs resulted in life in prison without parole. At age 16, Sarah shot the man who had abused her for years and used her as a prostitute. She is also in prison, with no possibility of ever being parole. There are over 2500 stories just like these and it’s time for this injustice to stop. I encourage you to communicate with our representatives in Sacramento and urge them to support this bill. It’s time we stood for those most vulnerable in our society who can not speak for themselves. – our children. Perhaps next Yom Kippur when we say the words that “prayer, repentance and acts of justice can turn away the evil decree,” we will be speaking of our system of justice as well as our own lives.