Crip-walking: Gang Symbol or Club Move?
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In recent months the dance style commonly known as Crip-walking, or C-walking, has caused much controversy. Why? Because the dance step commonly used by the street gang known as the Crips is now popping up in clubs and schools around the country.
The gang now known as the Crips was started in 1969 by a Los Angeles youth named Raymond Washington. Originally, the gang was called the Baby Avenues, eventually evolving into the Avenues Cribs, and then finally into the Crips in 1971. In the years proceeding, Raymond Washington and his gang influenced other youths in the Los Angeles area, leading to the establishment of a number of Crip sets. During the 1980s several Crip-affiliated gangs appeared in the Central American country of Belize. Throughout the decade, a large number of these gang members immigrated to the United States and settled on both the West and East Coasts. A rather large contingent of Belizean Crips migrated to Harlem in New York City, eventually forming the Harlem Mafia Crips. It is widely accepted that this migration aided in the spreading of the Crips to the East Coast. Since its creation, the Crips have been targeted for their involvement in the drug trade and other violent crimes (GRIPE).
Crips often C-walked after shooting or killing a rival gang member, in many cases spelling out messages with their feet. In The New Forbidden Dance, ABC News reports "no one disputes that the [Crip-walk] dance originated with the Crips. The C-Walk's jittery stutter-step combination of foot pivots and shuffles were on display at gang celebrations more than 20 years ago..." The question today, however, is whether or not the dance has crossed over to mainstream society and lost its violent gang association.
On the one end of the debate are those who feel that C-walking should be banned from schools and clubs due to the gang ties it has. On the other hand, there are those who feel that the Crip-walk dance is simply a passing fad.
Read other articles about the Crip-walk and see the dance in action: "Some Principals Ban Dance With Gang Ties" -- Streetgangs.com "The New Forbidden Dance" -- ABCnews.com | ||||
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