Overview:
The Makos Swim Team in North St. Louis is a competitive YMCA and USA Swimming program that encourages Black and multiracial kids to participate in the sport of swimming. The team, which has been around for a few years, is also a part of the Black Swimmers Alliance, a group that offers swim lessons to families of color and aims to bridge the gap in aquatic skills. The team's coach and other parents have faced challenges, such as racist comments and discrimination, but they continue to work towards making swimming a safe and accessible activity for all.
Byย Cara Anthony
At a swim meet just outside St. Louis, heads turned when a team of young swimmers walked through the rec center with their parents in tow.
A supportive mom kept her eye on the clock while the Makos Swim Team athletes tucked their natural curls, braids, and locs into yellow swimming caps. In the bleachers, spectators whispered about the teamโs presence at the pool in Centralia, Illinois โ as they do at almost every competition.
โThey donโt know that weโre listening,โ Randella Randell, a swimmerโs mom, later said. โBut weโre here to stay. Weโre here to represent. Weโre going to show you that Black kids know how to swim. We swim, too.โ
Randellโs son, Elijah Gilliam, 14, is a member of the Makosโ competitive YMCA andย USA Swimmingย program based in North St. Louis. Almost 40 athletes, ages 4 to 19, swim on the squad, which encourages Black and multiracial kids to participate in the sport. Coached by Terea Goodwin and Torrie Preciado, the team also spreads the word about water safety in their community.
โIf we can get everybody to learn how to swim, just that little bit, it would save so many lives,โ said Goodwin, a kitchen and bathroom designer by day who is known as Coach T at the pool. โSwimming is life.โ
But just like mako sharks, such teams of Black swimmers are rare. Detroit has theย Razor Aquatics, Howard University in Washington, D.C., hasย a teamย thatโs made headlines forย winning championships, and some alums from North Carolina A&Tโs former swim team created aย group to offer water safety classes.

In the past, Black Americans were barred from many public swimming pools. When racial segregation was officially banned, white Americans established private swim clubs that required members to pay a fee that wasnโt always affordable. As a result, swimming remained effectively segregated, and many Black Americans stayed away from pools.
The impact is still felt. More than a third of Black adults report they do not know how to swim, according toย Centers for Disease Control and Prevention statistics, more than twice the rate for adults overall.
Seeing a need in their community, the parents of the Makos swimmers formed theย Black Swimmers Allianceย at the end of 2023 with a goal of โbridging the gap in aquatic skills,โ according to its website. But the group, which offers swim lessons to families of color, is concerned about the flow of grant money dwindling because of the recent federal backlash against diversity, equity, and inclusion programs. Even so, they are fundraising directly on their own, because lives are being lost.

In late January, aย 6-year-oldย died at a hotel pool in St. Louis. A boy the same ageย drowned while taking swim lessonsย at a St. Louis County pool in 2022. And across the river in Hamel, Illinois, aย 3-year-old boy drownedย in a backyard pool last summer.
Drowning is theย leading cause of deathย for children ages 1 through 4, according to the CDC.ย Black childrenย andย Black adultsย drown far more often than their white peers.
Members of the Black Swimmers Alliance discussed those statistics before their advocacy work began. They also had to address another issue โ many of the adult volunteers and parents with children on the Makos team didnโt know how to swim. Even though their children were swimming competitively, the fear of drowning and the repercussions of history had kept the parents out of the pool.
The Makos athletes also noticed that their parents were timid around water. Thatโs when their roles reversed. The children started to look out for the grown-ups.
Joseph Johnson, now 14, called out his mom, Connie Johnson, when she tried to give him a few tips about how to improve his performance.
โHe was like, โMom, you have no idea,โโ the now-55-year-old recalled. โAt first, I was offended, but he was absolutely right. I didnโt know how to swim.โ
She signed up for lessons with Coach T.

Najma Nasiruddin-Crump and her husband, Joshua Crump, signed up, too. His daughter Kaia Collins-Crump, now 14, had told them she wanted to join the Makos team the first time she saw it. But among the three of them, no one knew how to swim.
Joshua Crump, 38, said he initially felt silly at the lessons, then started to get the hang of it.
โI donโt swim well enough to beat any of the children in a race,โ he said with a chuckle.

Nasiruddin-Crump, 33, said she was terrified the first time she jumped in the deep end. โIt is the only moment in my life outside of birthing my children that Iโve been afraid of something,โ she said. โBut once you do it, itโs freedom. Itโs pure freedom.โ
Mahoganny Richardson, whose daughter Ava is on the team, volunteered to teach more Makos parents how to swim.
She said the work starts outside the pool with a conversation about a personโs experiences with water. She has heard stories about adults who were pushed into pools, then told to sink or swim. Black women were often told to stay out of the water to maintain hairstyles that would swell if their hair got wet.

Bradlin Jacob-Simms, 47, decided to learn how to swim almost 20 years after her family survived Hurricane Katrina. She evacuated the day before the storm hit but said one of her friends survived only because that womanโs brother was able to swim to find help.
โIf it wasnโt for him, they would have died,โ she said, noting thatย hundreds did drown.

โThatโs the reason why swimming is important to me,โ she said. โA lot of times, us as African Americans, we shy away from it. Itโs not really in our schools. Itโs not really pushed.โ
Makos swimmer Rocket McDonald, 13, encouraged his mom, Jamie McDonald, to get back into the water and stick with it. When she was a child, her parents had signed her up for swim lessons, but she never got the hang of it. Her dad was always leery of the water. McDonald didnโt understand why until she read about a race riot at a pool not far from where her dad grew up that happened after St. Louis desegregated public pools in 1949.

โIt was a full-circle moment,โ McDonald said. โIt all makes sense now.โ
Now, at 42, McDonald is learning to swim again.
Safety is always a priority for the Makos team. Coach T makes the athletes practice swimming in full clothing as a survival skill.
Years ago, as a lifeguard in Kansas City, Missouri, Coach T pulled dozens of children out of recreational swimming pools who were drowning. Most of them, she said, were Black children who came to cool off but didnโt know how to swim.

โI was literally jumping in daily, probably hourly, getting kids out of every section,โ Goodwin said. After repeated rescues, too many to count, she decided to offer lessons.
Swim lessons can be costly. The Black Swimmers Alliance aimed to fund 1,000 free swim lessons by the end of 2025. It had already funded 150 lessons in St. Louis. But when the group looked for grants, the alliance scaled back its goal to 500 lessons, out of caution about what funding would be available.
Itโs still committed to helping Black athletes swim competitively throughout their school years and in college.

Most of the time, the Makos swimmers practice in a YMCA pool that doesnโt have starting blocks. Backstroke flags are held in place with fishing wire, and the assistant coachโs husband, Josรฉ Preciado, used his 3-D printer to make red, regulation 15-meter markers for the team. Once a week, parents drive the team to a different YMCA pool that has starting blocks. That pool is about 5 degrees warmer for its senior patronsโ comfort. Sometimes the young swimmers fuss about the heat, but practicing there helps them prepare for meets.
Parents said white officials have frequently disqualified Makos swimmers. So some of the team parents studied the rules of the sport, and eventually four became officials to diversify the ranks and ensure all swimmers are treated fairly. Still, parents said, that hasnโt stopped occasional racist comments from bystanders and other swimmers at meets.

โSome didnโt think weโd make it this far, not because of who we are but where weโre from,โ Goodwin has taught the Makos swimmers to recite. โSo we have to show them.โ
And this spring, Richardson is offering lessons for Makos parents while their children practice.
โItโs not just about swimming,โ Richardson said. โItโs about overcoming something that once felt impossible.โ

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