Support for Sheffield Big Brother Burngreave team's work on streets to reduce knife crime
and live on Freeview channel 276
The Big Brother Burngreave team run weekly sessions for young people aged from 12 to 20, playing football, basketball and multi-sports. The sessions also include workshops discussing mental health, peer pressure, family and self-development.
Safiya Saeed from Reach Up, the organisation providing the project, said: “We engage with the young people on the streets or from referrals from other organisations such as social care, support services and schools.
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Hide Ad“We actively engage in hard-hitting conversations on knife crime to understand it from those most affected.
“This funding will help us communicate with local parents and young people who have been excluded from school or exploited.
“We apply our advanced knowledge and ability to relate to the communities involved and most affected by violent crime, with wider audiences.”
The £11,730 funding from the South Yorkshire Violence Reduction Fund will purchase different coloured t-shirts that will show the level of achievement of the young person in the programme.
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Hide AdA small documentary will be also be produced about how young people feel and what actions they think need to be taken to prevent and reduce violence.
The film will raise awareness of the realities and changing attitudes towards violence, its victims and causes.
Dr Alan Billings, South Yorkshire Police and Crime Commissioner and chair of the violence reduction unit executive board, visited the project.
He said: “It is worrying that in the last few years some young people have been carrying knives and have been drawn into violent behaviour.
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Hide Ad“Being able to engage with young people through initiatives like Big Brother Burngreave is a first step in understanding what lies behind this and how, therefore, we can overcome it.
“We need to help young people realise that the perception that everyone is carrying a knife is untrue, it is only a perception.
“And we need them to understand that those who do carry blades are more at risk than those who don't, not least because some have had their own knives used against them.”