WATCH: Pilsen activist uses fitness, political education to combat life expectancy gap

Tanya Lozano leads political education event
Activist Tanya Lozano leads a political education event at the Healthy Hood fitness studio she founded in Pilsen. (Chantel Ropp/Medill)

By Chantel Ropp
Medill Reports

According to an analysis of the largest 500 U.S. cities by NYU School of Medicine, Chicago is the city with the largest life expectancy gap amongst low income and affluent communities in the country. One nonprofit organization in the Pilsen neighborhood is tackling these inequities through fitness, political education and community health programming. Meet Healthy Hood Chicago, founded by activist, dancer and mother Tanya Lozano.

 

Video Transcript:

TANYA LOZANO: My name is Tanya Lozano. I’m the founder and CEO of Healthy Hood Chicago. This is an organization that was created to combat the current 20-year life expectancy gap that exists between communities of color and affluent communities. In Chicago it’s actually the largest life expectancy gap that exists in the nation, and it’s because of how segregated our city is, so the disparities are magnified here. But it’s really just a reflection of the disparities that exist all across the nation.

Text on screen (no narration): TO HELP CLOSE THIS GAP, HEALTHY HOOD OFFERS $5 FITNESS CLASSES, POLITICAL EDUCATION EVENTS AND COMMUNITY HEALTH PROGRAMMING.

TANYA LOZANO: Everything we do, we really try to politically educate our people. If you’re coming to a fitness class, we’re going to tell you you’re not just coming to work out for yourself. What you’re doing right now is revolutionary because there’s a 20-year life expectancy gap that exists in the city because of the broken health care system, and it was intentionally built that way. So by you coming here, you’re standing up to the broken system, and I want you to go back and tell that to your family.

“KID,” HEALTHY HOOD MEMBER: Healthy Hood is here for the community. Healthy Hood has been here for the longest. I mean, they started off small, but it’s grown to a very powerful community where the motto is ‘we got us.’ And it’s very true.

TANYA LOZANO: We’re changing the culture. We’re making it cool again to be conscious people, and we’re making it cool again for people to take on responsibility in our movement for social justice.

 

Chantel Ropp is a video and broadcast graduate student at Medill. You can follow her on Twitter at @ChantelRopp and Instagram at @ChantelRopp.