September 12, 2013 (CHICAGO) (WLS) -- A basketball tournament that brings together rival gang members to battle it out on the court instead of on the streets will have a second year.
The 2nd Annual Peace Basketball Tournament will take place at St. Sabina's Church gymnasium, 7800 S. Racine, on Saturday, September 21 from 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. Several sports celebrities are involved, including Chicago's Joakim Noah and Epiphanny Prince. http://www.saintsabina.org/.
The first Peace Tournament was held in September 2012, and is credited with helping to curb violence in the neighborhood. Two young men say it changed their lives.
"That's all I knew, that's all I wanted to do. I wasn't thinking positive, my mind was not on track," McGhee said.
"I spent last summer in jail," Porche said.
Just a year later, they're off the streets- and in the gym at St. Sabina's Church. McGhee, Porche and other gang members were recruited by young men like themselves to participate in the Peace Basketball Tournament, a basketball tournament that brings together rival gangs.
"People just thinking they are gang members, when they're really not. They're really, as you can see, really are good guys," Brandon Jackson, St. Sabina Peacemaker, said.
Those good guys chose to leave their gangs for a straight life after their experience with the first annual Peace Basketball Tournament. Father Michael Pfleger said his efforts to save lives through basketball is working.
"We are not saying it's the only thing, but we do know it has worked. In this neighborhood the crime has dropped over 95-percent," Father Pfleger said.
It doesn't end with basketball. In the past year, Pfleger says the more than 1,100 kids who participated in the Peace league have jobs and more than 140 are getting their GEDs.
"Basically, it's been a peaceful thing since the tournament, everybody getting along, shaking hands," Patrick Vance, St. Sabina Peacemaker, said.
Through basketball, Vance helped McGhee and Porche. Now those two former gang members hope to be an example for others.
"I feel better, more comfortable, and relaxed. Now I can walk around with more money, the real money, not the wrong money. It feels good," McGhee said.
chicago news, sarah schulte
- Congress sends bill on debt, shutdown to Obama
- Victim, victim's mom testify at bat attack trial
- VOTE in the Jeopardy: Battle of the Decades
- ABC7 Weather Forecast
- Shooting victim collapses in Walgreens near DePaul campus
- TV pitchman Kevin Trudeau headed back to jail
- Boy, 12, brings gun to school in Berkeley
- 2 dead in Fernwood shooting near 105th, Lafayette
- Possible Krokodil case being treated in McHenry Co.
- Mayor tables plan to rename Stony Island Ave.
- All LSD lanes reopened after crash at S-Curve
- Speed cameras issue tickets at Gompers Park
- Schaumburg mom missing 4 days
- abcnews: Obama Praises Deal After Senate Approval
-
Most Popular
-
Most Viewed StoriesMost Viewed Photos
- abc7chicago.com home
- Site Map
- RSS
- Advertise with Us
- Contact Us
- Online Public Inspection File
- Technical Help
- ABC.com
- ABCNews.com
- Privacy Policy
- Interest-Based Ads
- Safety Information for this site
- Terms of Use
- Copyright ©2013 ABC Inc., WLS-TV/DT Chicago, IL. All Rights Reserved.




