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photo by Robert Clark |
You would understand if Jaconda Jackson wanted to close the book on
her past. Almost cheerfully, however, Jackson, who just
finished her senior season as a forward on the Fairleigh
Dickinson basketball team, chooses instead to open the
dozen 300-page notebooks into which she has distilled her
remarkable life's story. "The things I read in those
books," she says, "I can't help but wonder, Was
that really me?"
Jackson was a finalist for the U.S. Basketball Writers'
Association Most Courageous Award, which was given last spring to Auburn's Wes Flanigan for his inspirational return
to the hardwood from bone cancer. But the story of the
24-year-old Jackson, who spent much of her childhood
homeless in Philadelphia, is similarly uplifting.
"I've never had a case as extreme as Jaconda's,"
says Janet Merriweather, a Philadelphia social worker who
met Jackson 11 years ago. "Kids might be abandoned for
a few days or weeks. But she was on her own for
years."
Almost six years, by Jackson's reckoning. She never
knew her father, and her mother, a drug and alcohol abuser,
wandered in and out of the lives of her seven children, who
passed from relative to relative. By her eighth birthday
Jaconda had taken to the streets, living in the abandoned
houses and tenements of South Philadelphia. "A little
before my 13th birthday, me and my brother Kevin found a
house that nobody knew about and fixed it up," says
Jackson. "It wasn't much, but it was ours. But one day
my uncle came over with some friends, and they just
ransacked the place. Me and Kevin had had enough. We took
some pills. I found a razor and slashed my wrists. When I
woke up, I was being rushed to an ambulance."
Shortly after her suicide attempt, Jaconda was sent to
a group home. Despite her sketchy academic records--she
estimates that she attended about a dozen schools between
the ages of eight and 13--Jaconda was placed in the seventh
grade. Two years later she entered Philadelphia's Martin
Luther King High, where she set the school career scoring
record. The first member of her family to graduate from
high school, Jaconda was courted by Iowa, Penn State and
Virginia. Wary of the academic rigors that lay ahead, she
chose Fairleigh Dickinson, a smaller Division I school with
an affiliation with Edward Williams Junior College, where
she spent two years.
After being named the Northeast Conference's Newcomer
of the Year in 1993-94, Jackson missed most of the last
three seasons because of tears in her left anterior
cruciate ligament. "It crushed me," she says. To
deal with her pain, she turned to the diaries she has kept
faithfully since she was sent to the Philadelphia group
home 11 years ago. As Jackson, a communications major who
hopes to pursue a journalism career, reread the story of
her childhood she had a revelation: "I've already come
back," she says.
--Christian Stone
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