JOBS, JUSTICE, HOUSING NOW!
by Spencer
There were
probably more people in the room at the Drop Inn Center than would comfortably
fit under normal circumstances, but today people wanted to be close and share
their memories and their grief. Friends of buddy’s passed along narrow paths between knots
of folks talking quietly, shaking hands, hugging, crying, comforting. One woman
came up to me and said, “You gave me shock.
From the back, I thought you was buddy.
The last time I saw him [he] was laying there, not moving.”
Staff of the Drop Inn Center were slipping into new T-shirts bearing
buddy’s likeness and the message: WE SHALL NOT BE MOVED.
The march
stepped off promptly at Noon from 12th and Elm with the words “Buddy would
have loved this” and a thousand people set forth to walk the streets lined
with hand painted posters, escorted by police who stopped traffic and followed
respectfully by the media. The pace
of the march varied, speeding up when the street was wide and slowing to a crawl
when folks bunched up on narrow side streets, lined with buildings that ReStoc
and other community organizations had strived to save.
The crowd of
black, white, poor and middle-class folks walked largely in silence, often with
heads bowed, joyless...but determined. “Jobs”
said one sign on a building. “JUSTICE”
cried out another sign. “Housing
NOW” proclaimed a second floor banner. We
passed a community garden and a number of churches
as we wound our way to Washington Park, where buddy’s friends gathered to
remember his life and their struggles.
At a gazebo
in the park, speaker after speaker called upon the crowd to take up the fight
that buddy had put down so suddenly and so involuntarily.
The choir sang “We Who Believe in Freedom Cannot Rest.”
Buddy’s aggrieved brother compared buddy’s life to the life of Jesus.
In a moving speech, the director of the Drop Inn Center which buddy
founded in 1974, told the crowd a story about a media personality who told her
cameraman, “Oh, that’s nobody “ referring to a Drop Inn Center
employee.” The director went onto
say that no one makes sure that the hungry are fed, that the light bills are
paid and that the homeless are brought in from the cold.
“We are all no one.”
Buddy’s life was seized and destroyed by a neighbor and former client of the Drop Inn Center who came into buddy’s office and shot him—ostensibly to stop the voices in his head that told him to kill buddy gray.