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Youth experiences revelation that turns his life around

By LEE TANT, T&D Staff Writer  Monday, October 01, 2007

4 comment(s) | Default | Large

Halloween is a holiday generally associated with dark imagery. For Emanuel Wright, Halloween a year ago is when he finally saw the light and now is helping others to the see that light through speaking to various groups about his experience.

That Halloween day, Wright walked into the hallways of Edisto High School anticipating a normal day, but it turned out to be anything but normal.

"I was just going to school to be going to school," Wright said of his life before that faithful day.

Embroiled in a life of gang activity and habitual marijuana use, Wright then did not view school as a resource but merely as a place to joke around with his friends. At that time, Wright was walking a tight rope toward graduation and had eight discipline referrals to his credit within the first nine weeks of school.

It was discipline issues that had him nearly expelled from Orangeburg-Wilkinson. His mother, Charmainne, had Wright transferred to a school in Anderson. Wright stayed on the straight and narrow for a while, but, "then I got back into the same things." He dropped out his junior year but returned to Orangeburg and gave Edisto High School a try.

He described his life before Halloween 2006 as centered around drug dealing, robbing and stealing.

Then Wright sat down in teacher Angela Bunch's biology class last year and was unable to move.

"It was like I was in a possessed stage," Wright said of his unexpected condition.

An ambulance was dispatched, and Wright ended up being treated at the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston. Doctors failed to pinpoint Wright's exact condition but eventually he was released.

Wright immediately viewed the episode as a wake-up call.

"I haven't seen anything the same since then," Wright said.

Wright has channeled the negative experiences of his life into a positive through the help of the New Direction program and his church, New Life in Christ Ministry. Instead of being involved in gangs and drugs, he is now preaching against them.

Wright gave his speech to Job Corps students in Bamberg last Tuesday. It was his third speech to a different audience. Previously, he spoke at his church and began by speaking to New Direction students at the suggestion of the program's director Elaine Kelly.

"There is another way out," Wright told an assembly of Job Corps students. He said he found his way out by devoting his life to God and the church. Wright says he now turns to the Bible to gain a sense of understanding and purpose.

Around June when his favorite team, the Cleveland Cavaliers, were struggling to get past the San Antonio Spurs' .jpgling defense in the NBA Finals, Wright, too, was struggling to get past temptations. Unlike the Cavaliers, Wright did not lose his battle.

He said his faith and knowing that over the last year he had established himself on the right path pushed him through those tough times.

His pastor, the Rev. Warren Smith, first saw Wright's demeanor evolve a few months after he first began attending church.

"His thoughts were actually changing," Smith said.

So were his grades as each quarter saw Wright's average improve dramatically. By the time the final quarter ended, he had turned from nearly failing out of school to having a 93 average.

"I hadn't got on the A-B honor roll since middle school," he told his audience at Job Corps.

One source of this transformation was the New Direction program, Wright said. The program listens to the issues of at-risk children and helps them to address those issues. In addition, the program attempts to map out a future plan for them. Apparently for Wright, the title of the program was an apt description.

"I came in with one direction and came out with a new direction," he said.

He said many of his former friends became distant after he changed his ways, something he alludes to during his speeches. He encourages crowds not to personalize violent rap lyrics to themselves or hold rappers with such esteem.

"50 Cent. He's getting money, but it's no money in my pocket," he said to the Job Corps students.

Wright hopes to inspire his audiences to look for a positive way to become a success.

Success is something Wright himself is now aspiring toward, and he realizes that his actions before Halloween a year ago will still be a setback to his goals. It's a challenge Wright openly accepts and realizes without fear.

"I goofed around school for six years. A few good semesters isn't good to change that," he said.

Wright is currently working full time and hopes to attend Southern Methodist College next semester. From there, he eventually hopes to transfer to the University of South Carolina to study business management.

In the meantime, Wright said he will continue to give speeches to help others make the transformation that he has undergone.

"When I spoke, it just moved everybody. I realized that the Lord sent me here to tell my story," Wright said of his first speech.

T&D Staff Writer Lee Tant can be reached by e-mail at ltant@timesanddemocrat.com or by phone at 803-534-1060. Discuss this and other stories online at TheTandD.com.

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4 comment(s)
The following comments are reader submitted. They do not represent the views of The T&D or Lee Enterprises.

afrouniversal wrote on Oct 4, 2007 11:05 AM:

" God is good, this young man is proof that God can make a way for all. This is the kind of story that we call need to be comment on. Something that is good in your community! God Bless you young man. Keep spreading hope to others that may not know how to get out of that situation! God Bless! Stay encouraged! "

Barbara wrote on Oct 1, 2007 9:22 PM:

" May God Bless you. The day that you could not move was God getting you ready to really learn that only in him can you really live a great life. I will keep you on my prayer list. Its not going to be easy but you can make it. "

notime wrote on Oct 1, 2007 2:14 PM:

" Wow! What an uplifting story. God can take any life and turn it around. What better person to minister to other at-risk youths than someone who has been there and understands the pressures. Keep up the good work Emanuel (which means "God is with us")! May God always be with you and bless you and your family as you continue to touch others' lives. "

LadyTaylor777 wrote on Oct 1, 2007 7:04 AM:

" Praise the Lord!!!! Hallelujah!!! Glory to God!!! God is great and greatly to be praised. I truly praise God for Emanuel's change of life. Emanuel your name means God with us. It's good for parents to KNOW the meaning of a name before naming a child because every time that we call that child, we're calling them the meaning of the name. Emmanuel continue to look to Jesus the author and finisher of your faith according to the word of God. Pray that your former friends get saved and filled with the Holy Ghost also. There is nothing too hard for God. I praise God for your testimony. I encourage you to continue to warn others about the dangers of gang and drug life. Your testimony will truly help someone else to make a change. There is great destiny for Emanuel. There are many blessings waiting for him also as he lives right and stay in Christ Jesus. Emanuel just be alllll that you can be for Christ. As you go to college study hard and make God, yourself and family proud. Emanuel look forward to greatness!!! I pray for you in the spirit because the Holy Ghost misses NOTHING. I pray that you WILL be a great success in school, at work, in the word of God, in sharing your testimony and as a family man. As God speaks to us in His word, He says to us/Emmanuel in Jeremiah 29:11 For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the Lord, thoughts of peace, and not of evil, to give you an expected end. "



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