Star Tribune
Somali parents ramp up efforts to prevent tragedies following 4-year-old boy’s drowning
Tears flowed at the makeshift memorial along Minnehaha Creek where a 4-year-old boy with autism drowned last week, but talk among mourners at the site near his mother’s home in Hopkins also turned to what might be done to prevent similar tragedies in the future.
Local groups dedicated to providing resources for Somali families of children with autism have since picked up the discussion. Protecting young children with extra vulnerabilities can be a challenge even without the language and cultural barriers faced by immigrant families.
“The community needs to come together and understand that this is a serious problem when it comes to not only raising a child with autism but also that it’s a serious safety issue,” said Mahdi Warsama, CEO of the Somali Parents Autism Network (SPAN), which provides resources and support for Somali families with autistic children.
Waeys Ali Mohamed was last seen the morning of June 9, leaving the apartment building in Hopkins where his family lived. His body was found the next morning by a volunteer searcher about 500 yards downstream from the apartment, following an extensive search effort. Hopkins police called it a tragic accident.
Warsama said a simple step would be to increase the prevalence of interior door locks with number combinations, which could prevent a child from wandering away from home. But he said apartment complex managers often resist those modifications. In some cases, he said, his organization has assisted Somali families facing eviction for installing a lock.
“The families have to know that they have a right to ask for a special accommodation if they have a child with autism,” said Warsama, who has a child with autism.
The Chorus apartments, where the boy lived, did not return calls seeking comment.
Children with autism are four times more likely to wander away from home, and are 160 times more likely to drown than children without the disorder, according to the nationwide nonprofit Autism Society.
Warsama said the drowning has him wanting to develop a training course specifically to teach water safety. Dr. Linda Quan, a Seattle-based physician who has studied drowning and how to prevent it for 40 years, said there has been “enormous interest” nationwide in teaching children with autism how to swim.
“We know it’s hard to teach children with autism how to swim, but it can be done,” Quan said. “There are more and more studies that they can obtain swim skills.”
Quan emphasized that even with swimming or water safety knowledge, “that still cannot be relied upon to protect them.”
Aside from direct prevention methods, Warsama and other nonprofits and professors said the incident highlights a broader need for more culturally-appropriate services for Somalian parents of children with autism, whom they said often face additional barriers to resources.
Amy Hewitt, the director of the Institute on Community Integration at the University of Minnesota, said there’s an overall dearth of well-trained professionals for Somali children “and every other child from a diverse racial, ethnic or linguistic background.”
“The importance of working with people who can communicate with you in your preferred language, who understand your cultural background, where trusting relationships can be built is critical,” Hewitt said. “We’re just not there yet.”
Warsama’s nonprofit, SPAN, is one of the groups trying to improve the services available for Somali families. The group provides “Somali culture 101″ trainings, in which workers visit county service providers, schools and health facilities to educate on the needs and accommodations a Somali client might have.
Some of the challenge is a stigma around autism that exists within the Somali community, according to SPAN chairman Abdulkadir Hassan.
“This stigma causes Somali parents to hide their children, and it becomes very hard for schools and other professionals who provide services to figure out who is qualified for the services,” Hassan said during an interview at SPAN’s offices in Sabathani Community Center.
In 2015, a study released by Hewitt and others found that Somali children with autism were more likely to have an intellectual disability than non-Somalis. But she said those trends are no longer applicable after studying additional data collected since the 2015 report.
“We don’t have good enough data to know whether prevalence rates in the Somali community are higher or not, but we know that many children in the Somali community live with autism,” Hewitt said.
SPAN is one of four nonprofits included in a joint statement Friday that mourned Waeys’ death and vowed to collaborate on preventing additional drownings.
“Waeys is not the first autistic child that has been lost to elopement, in water especially, but we desperately wish for him to be the last,” said Ellie Wilson, executive director of the Autism Society of Minnesota.
She emphasized that accidental deaths like Waeys’ happen due to a “chain of inequities” ranging from family isolation and community stigma, to lack of culturally responsive disability services, to renter policies.
“We hope that more stakeholders understand the nuanced connection between these barriers and seek to confront them with a multifaceted prevention response,” she said.
Here are some links to Minnesota nonprofits that provide services to families with autism:
Star Tribune
Is K-pop star Jin wearing a University of Minnesota shirt in his new music video?
Minnesota K-pop fans are delighting over a detail in singer/songwriter Jin’s new music video.
In the music video for “Running Wild,” which debuted Nov. 14, the South Korean star and member of boy group sensation BTS appears to be wearing a University of Minnesota sweatshirt. The fashion choice was first noticed by fans in a promotional video last month.
The maroon shirt is emblazoned with a gold M, which looks very much in the style of the University of Minnesota’s logo. It’s visible around the video’s 1:30-minute mark.
“International army, you might not know that, but that is a Minnesota collegiate sweater,” TikTok user moonchild_of_bangtan posted in a video.
The Minnesota Star Tribune contacted the University of Minnesota to find out if the shirt is official merch. We’ll update this story if we hear back.
Star Tribune
Kandiyohi Sheriff’s Office rescues hunters in two boating incidents
Amid high winds and cold temperatures, the Kandiyohi County Sheriff’s Office rescued hunters in two separate incidents on the water Saturday.
Around 6:30 a.m. Saturday, the sheriff’s office responded to a report of two duck hunters, ages 33 and 13, with early signs of hypothermia stranded on the Middle Fork Crow River in New London Township, according to a news release. Wind was gusting at about 30 mph and their boat had filled with water. The two left their boat and swam to an island to call for help.
The two were located and brought back to the boat access, where they were medically cleared, the release said. Their boat was towed to shore.
Around 1:10 p.m., the sheriff’s office responded to a report of a hunter stranded on a Big Kandiyohi Lake island. The 32-year-old man’s boat had sunk after it filled with water during 30 mph wind gusts. The man was rescued and returned to the boat access.
The sheriff’s office was assisted by several agencies in the water rescues. The office urges hunters to be cautious on the water when wind speeds are high and unpredictable.
Star Tribune
Fentanyl drives surging crime in St. Paul’s Midway neighborhood
Larry McPherson sees himself in the faces of unsheltered people wandering St. Paul’s Midway neighborhood.
McPherson survived homelessness for seven years in Chicago before he found God and a home in Minnesota more than 17 years ago. As a member of 21 Days of Peace, an organization of violence interrupters across St. Paul, McPherson has defused fights and built trust among vulnerable people for years. But as McPherson and others respond to a growing number of crime hotspots, he worries that conditions in the Midway neighborhood will worsen without help from neighbors and officials.
“This is real. People are hungry. This [has been an issue], but now it’s escalated because of this drug called fentanyl. That’s the driving force,” McPherson said.
“Come next spring, next summer, it’s going to be a nightmare out here if they don’t make drastic changes in these next four to five months.”
Neighbors and officials have reported surging crime around the Midway neighborhood for months, taking to social media and community forums to report discarded needles, burglaries, and other crimes seldom seen in recent years. Authorities believe much of the blame lies with Kimball Court apartments, a housing complex which aims to get people off the streets and into housing without requiring sobriety. Investigators believe the complex has become a hub for drug trafficking, troubling residents and nearby businesses who have lost customers.
Though many crime metrics fell across the neighborhood, according to St. Paul Police Department data, robberies and drug violations surged.
St. Paul penned a contract with 21 Day of Peace last month, paying six people a total of about $10,000 to engage residents in the Midway neighborhood, Rondo, and the city’s East side. The contract expires at the end of the year. Members of the organization have patrolled Midway and the area around Kimball Court since then, connecting homeless people to city resources. Those members greeted people walking by the apartment complex Tuesday.
Members of the organization asked some people if they wanted help finding resources. They told a few to move and respect neighbors’ property. Most were asked how they were doing and whether they wanted help with anything, a role McPherson believes is bridging the gap between residents and police.