There were inflatable bouncy houses and a magician.
A guy handling all sorts of exotic animals like a hissing cockroach and an albino python.
Lots of kids, too, at this celebration the day before father’s day in Greenville.
Not as many dads, though.
But it’s a start, a new initiative to bring absent dads back into the lives of their children, sponsored by the Greenville Housing Authority.
About 250 people showed. It had an almost circus-like quality with bbq and kids laughing and grandma hazing the magician.
The underside was the serious business of kids without dads.
A representative of the Upstate Fathers Coalition was there to explain what the organization could do as a mediator between Family Court and a dad behind on child support payments.
Also on hand at Westview Homes were folks from Job Corps, Greenville Mental Health, Kool Smiles Pediatric Dentistry, and The Greenville Workforce Investment Board / Personal Pathways To Success.
“We want to remove any barrier as to why a father is absent,” said Nyroba B. Leamon, the REACH Youth Coordinator and Case Manager for the housing authority.
Leamon used to work as a cop in Spartanburg. He worked in Greenville County’s alternative school. He’s the founder of Today’s Antioch Fellowship in Greer.
The one constant through what he calls his journeyman career is working with kids.
And at the housing authority, he says, one of the biggest problems for kids is many – no most – don’t have their dad around.
“Mothers are doing an excellent job,” he said. “But the reality is for a young man and a young woman there are some things only a father can teach.”
And not having that influence – and feeling unloved or unwanted – manifests itself in so many ways – poor grades, low self esteem, getting in trouble.
He said he asked a 16-year-old girl who lives in one of the Housing Authority units if her dad was coming to the father’s day event. She said no. He didn’t care about her. Every time she reaches out to him, he rebuffs her.
“You could hear the pain in her voice,” Leamon said.
The girl is an OK student, but could be a great student if she didn’t have to spend time thinking her dad didn’t love her.
His role, Leamon said, is to encourage her to keep reaching out, which will allow him and a vast support system to reach the father.
Leamon grew up in a housing project, as did his wife. But they benefited from both of their parents being in the home, he said.
Leamon believes the vast majority of absentee father chose that route not because they don’t care but because of life circumstances: a dead-end job that doesn’t cover his bills, back child support he cannot pay that could bring arrest at any moment, bad parenting that causes a man think it’s not his responsibility to raise a child, drugs.
A society of greed and prosperity creates in some people the desire to make the quick buck by selling drugs instead of working a legitimate eight-hour day.
“I’m not excusing it, but drugs is a status,” he said. “There are many who have sequenced from selling drugs.”
A new and better life begins with education. And days like last Saturday, when the mid-day heat beat down on government housing in Greenville, South Carolina, and kids laughed and giggled in the arms of their daddys.
“It starts with a change of the mind,” Leamon said. “How we think about things determines how we act.”


