Why Britain's effort to end knife crime is about more than stopping violence
Sephton Henry is on a mission: he wants to keep British kids away from violence and gangs.
The activist was once in their shoes himself. As a child, he was groomed into a gang, and he went to prison seven times before he found a way out. One of the keys to turning his life around, he says, was finding mentors who could relate to him, and who saw his worth and made him understand it, too.
Now he does the same for others, mentoring at-risk young people and speaking in schools, using his personal experience to get through to them. “We go into schools to try to prevent them from getting into it in first place,” he says. “They’re young enough that they’re not conditioned yet. But it’s not so much about what we say, it’s about who says it.” His past gives him credibility.
Work like Mr. Henry’s is suddenly getting
‘County lines’ crimeFighting crime like an epidemicUnderlying problems?You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.
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