Skip to main content

Homeboy Industries Helps Guys Get out of Gangs and Start Over

It’s dangerously easy to dehumanize gang members. In reality, joining a gang is often a sign that the person has been badly failed by society. One priest in Los Angeles realized these men and women didn’t need “tough on crime,” they needed hope and opportunity. So, Rev. Greg Boyle started Homeboy Industries and since 1988, he and his organization have helped thousands of former gang members start a new life away from and outside of the violence.

Los Angeles didn’t earn the name “Gang Capital” of the US for nothing. Estimates suggest there are 450 active gangs in the city with a combined membership of 45,000 people. It’s easy to think maybe all this sunshine and kale juice just breeds “bad” people, but when you look at the socio-economics of the city, the reason becomes much clearer. A study in 2014 showed 40% of Californians were poor or near poor. LA County has the highest rate of poverty in the entire not-so-Golden State, accounting for 34% of the state’s poor population. In East LA, over half of the population doesn’t have a high school diploma.

Homeboy Industries
Image used with permission by copyright holder

There are a number of reasons people join gangs and almost all of them are directly related to the kind of world represented by those statistics. For example, gangs can provide protection from gang and/or rival gang violence surrounding them, it can provide a sense of family for people lacking a strong home environment, it can seem like the only way to attain a certain status in the world, and sometimes they’re forced to join under the threat of violence.

Recommended Videos

The recidivism statistic for gang youth is startling: two-thirds will be rearrested and another third will return to prison within a few years of release. Even from a purely economic standpoint, this cycle is problematic: According to a 2010 Pew study, the average day in prison costs taxpayers $79 whereas a person on probation only costs $3.42 a day. The takeaway is that communities need to do much, much more to help people re-enter society and earn a decent living.

Homeboy Industries
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Rev. Boyle, affectionately known as Father Greg, grew up in Los Angeles and in 1986 he became the pastor of the Dolores Mission Church in Boyle Heights, smack dab in the middle of gang-ridden East LA. He witnessed such bloodshed he’s renamed this time period as “the decade of death.” The 1980s was also a time of “tough on crime” posturing from politicians, which may have sounded good on TV, but proved to be a disaster in real life. Instead, Father Greg chose to see gang members as humans. Humans who needed help.

In 1992, in the wake of the LA Riots, he launched Jobs for a Future and Proyecto Pastoral at the church. They bought an abandoned bakery with the help of movie producer Ray Stark (there’s no way you haven’t seen at least one of his films) and started the Homeboy Bakery. Cut to: 2001 and the Homeboy Bakery has proved such a success as a social enterprise business, Homeboy Industries is born.

Homeboy Industries
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Homeboy Industries covers an incredible gambit of things badly needed by people trying to recover their lives from LA gangs. The first of which is actually tattoo removal. They remove more tattoos than any other organization, helping to erase painful memories and associations that could prevent reentering society or getting a job. Thirty-five doctors volunteer to remove tattoos, focusing specifically on any gang-related ink. Legal services are available, offering free consultations on everything from post-conviction issues to child support and visitation. The legal team also petitions for dismissals and record expungements, things often neglected by an overwhelmed public defender’s office, to help in broadening a person’s employment opportunities.

Education is a huge component of Homeboy Industries, offering forty classes a week to help with earning a GED, college prep, test readiness, reading and writing. They also offer classes in anger management, parenting, and self-sufficiency. Recovery groups like AA and Criminals and Gang Members Anonymous are provided as well.

Homeboy Industries
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Through a number of volunteer licensed psychotherapists, people gain access to individual therapy, the court-approved Domestic Violence Intervention for Men program, substance abuse, Baby & Me classes to help parents understand the needs of their children.

Homeboy Industries also provides tuition, supplies, and additional tutoring for the awesome Photovoltaic Training program at the East Los Angeles Skills Center. Here students get training to work in the solar power industry. They’ve had almost 1,000 Homeboy clients go through the program and they have a graduation rate of 92%. An incredible 70% of those graduates have a job within 90 days of completing the program.

The average month at Homeboy Industries sees around 1,000 former gang members or people recently released from prison come through their doors. They’re performing 800 free tattoo removals, providing 140 legal counseling appointments, 120 mental health sessions, teaching and mentoring 400 students, and helping 240 job trainees, begging the question does the staff ever sleep?

And we haven’t even mentioned the Homeboy businesses yet. You’ve got Homegirl Cafe, where high-risk youth get a chance at sustainable employment in the culinary arts, ultimately earning a certificate. The original bakery is still cookin’, serving up from-scratch artisan breads and pastries that are insanely delicious and available at restaurants around the city. You’ve got Homeboy Silkscreen and Embroidery for all your custom needs, a catering service, their grocery line, offering truly some of the best pre-made salsa and guacamole you’ll ever taste, the Diner at City Hall, booths at farmer’s markets, and their line of shirts, bags, books, and other goodies.

Gangs are responsible for some horrific acts of violence, but the people in them are just that– people. Father Greg had the courage to recognize that fact and found the solution to stemming the tide of violence and incarceration in providing what people need– education, hope, kindness, and opportunity.

Elizabeth Dahl
Elizabeth Dahl is a southern girl in the heart of Los Angeles who lived far too long before learning what an incredible food…
Ted Lasso season 4: Everything we know so far
The show is coming back three years after the last season.
Jason Sudeikis in Ted Lasso

After plenty of questions about its future, Ted Lasso is back. The Apple TV+ hit seemed to be done following its third season, but production has officially started on the fourth, with much of the cast set to return for this new installment.

Now that we know Ted Lasso is coming back, there are still plenty of questions about what that means for the show, and how it might change moving forward — and everyone has opinions on what they'd like to see from season 4. Here's what we know so far, including when we might see that fourth season:

Read more
Beginner’s guide to cigar shapes and sizes — and why they matter
Why your cigar choice says more about you than your watch (and how to pick the perfect one)
A collection of cigars

Walking into a cigar shop and facing what seems like a million options is enough to make anyone panic. Cigars stacked everywhere, each with a strange name, size, and a slightly different shape from the last one. If you haven't done this before, it's tempting to just grab something, anything, and run!But hold on a second. Those shapes actually matter. They aren't just there to look fancy or make things confusing. The size and shape change the whole experience of smoking that cigar – how it tastes, burns, and feels. It's kind of like how driving a tiny sports car is way different than driving a big truck. Both get you where you're going, but the experience along the way is not the same.

What are cigar vitolas?

Read more
The writer of one of Netflix’s biggest drama is taking on James Bond next
We still don't know who will star in this new installment.
James Bond at a casino

The news that Denis Villeneuve would be taking on the next James Bond film was certainly exciting for many, and as we continue to speculate about who might take over as 007, we're also learning more about who else will be working behind the scenes on the film.

We now know that Steven Knight, the writer behind Peaky Blinders, will be writing the next Bond movie. While Knight is best known for his work on TV, which includes Peaky Blinders and the recent Stephen Graham series A Thousand Blows, he's also the writer behind Spencer and Maria.

Read more