Sacred
Bond: Black Men and Their Mothers
by Keith Michael Brown
Chapter One
Most mothers instinctively protect their
children from harm. Depending on the level of crime and violence in their
community, how a mother protects her children and how she teaches them to
protect themselves can make the difference between her children's survival
and their demise. Of the men I interviewed, Chicago police officer James
Love grew up in the roughest neighborhood, the Robert Taylor Homes, one of
the most notorious housing projects in the country. His mother was his
first line of defense against violence, gangs, and the unpredictable
situations he encountered daily. Now, as an undercover narcotics officer,
Love has survival skills, learned from her, that are a valuable asset in
his efforts to help rid the Chicago projects of drugs. His mother is
employed as a maintenance worker at Johnson Publishing Company, publisher
of Ebony and Jet magazines. With her impeccable style, she looks more like
a woman who would organize garden parties than confront gangs, but her
toughness has helped her son persevere both on and off the job. Their
mother-son bond has provided ongoing Support and guidance to Love, who
daily lives with violence and the stress associated with it. His mother's
love has given him the inspiration to overcome crises in his life and to
remain steadfast in his mission to clean up the streets. For his heroism
in the drug war Love has received a Medal of Valor—the highest honor a
policeman can receive—but to him the only hero in his life is his
mother, Henrietta Love.
JAMES LOVE
Narcotics Officer
AGE FORTY
MOTHER HENRIETTA LOVE
I was conducting search warrants in the
projects where a gang called the Gangster Disciples conducted business
when they ordered a contract on my life. I continued doing searches, even
when I got called into the station and was told that the contract had gone
into effect. I knew this wasn't a joke, but you can't be out there trying
to clean up the streets if you're going to run from people.
One night I was working with two white
officers and we were going into the projects. They dropped me off at this
dead end area so I could walk though a viaduct into the projects. That is
how we would always do it. But this time after they pulled off to get set
up, a van pulls up. The cargo doors open and I'm looking at guns. Right
away I'm thinking, "Oh you dummies, trying to rob a cop." Then
they called me Twentyone, which is a little tag name for undercover cops.
I knew that they knew I was a cop. They told me to get in the van, and I
did. They disarmed me except for a snub-nose that I keep strapped to my
ankle. One of the things that you learn from the streets is to always keep
talking, always have something to say to keep them off balance, to
misdirect them, and that's what I did. There were three guys, two
teenagers and an older guy; one of them stayed in the back of the van with
me the whole time. At one point they made me lie face down in the van. I
never got a chance to go for my snub.
One of the kids wanted to shoot me right
there, but the adult wouldn't let him. They took me to an abandoned garage
of some kind, a warehouse, and there was nowhere to run. I kept talking
steady while at the same time silently asking forgiveness for everything
that I ever did wrong. I kept telling myself that it was a bluff, that
they were just trying to scare me. But then, I don't know why, I couldn't
bet anymore and just said, "Shoot me if you're going to." And
that's when the kid lit me up. I took four bullets: one above the knee,
one bullet fractured my right forearm, and I took two to the sternum.
Something said fall down, play dead, and
that's what I did. I had a great vest on, but it is not like television
where they show someone getting shot and the guy just takes it in the
vest. It hurts, and knocks the wind out of you. I never knew that I
blacked out at some point until afterwards, when I got the photos of the
shooting and saw that there was a pool of blood. I was like, God, I must
have laid there for a while. I don't even remember that. I do remember
looking around and seeing garbage everywhere and thinking, if I'm going to
die, I'm going to die looking at the stars. I didn't want to die in this
filth. I thought about a sergeant in the Special Forces who always used to
say, "Bullets don't kill, shock kills you. No matter what, be
calm." I remember sitting up in the dirt, my bright yellow shirt was
red, my blue jeans were soaked with blood. I took my shoelaces out and
used my mouth to tie them around my arm and leg to make tourniquets, and I
got up and started walking.
This was a July night. It was hot. The
windows were open in the buildings around me and nobody answered my
screams. This was at one o'clock in the morning. I left a trail of blood
about four blocks long. That's how the police knew every house I went to
and were able to find the warehouse where I got shot.
I didn't know where I was. I remember there
was a guy going to the trunk of a car with some fishing gear. I really
wasn't hurting anymore, I was just tired. I wanted to go to sleep. But I
kept my badge in my crotch, and I remember taking my badge out as I walked
towards this guy. I told him I was a police officer. "I've been
shot," I said. "I don't know where I am, call 911." The
guy's eyes just got big as saucers, and he backed away from me and ran
into a house. At that point I was like, forget it, I am tired. I remember
trying to stand up against a fence and the next thing I know, I had slid
down into a seated position. I was laying on my side and I could see a
woman running from the same house towards me with a bunch of towels. That
woman cradled me and it felt like my mother was there holding me. I was
okay then. And she kept telling me you're going to be all right—all
those things your mother said to you when you were a kid. "You're
going to be okay," she said. At that moment it didn't matter whether
I lived or died, because I wasn't alone.
I could hear the sirens coming, but by then
I was in noogy-noogy land. I was so worried about the precinct notifying
my mother that I'd been shot. I thought, "That woman's going to come
in here hysterical, with rollers in her hair and house slippers. They're
going to have to sedate her." They had me in intensive care, and she
walked in and I looked up, and there is my mom in a two-piece pants suit,
makeup, hair done, and this was about four o'clock in the morning. She was
dressed to the nines. I'm hooked up to all these machines and I'm just
looking at her, and I smiled at her and she smiled back.
"I knew you were going to be
okay," she said, "so I figured I might as well dress up for the
occasion." Grown men had been sobbing in the trauma unit because I
was such a bloody mess. But my mother leaned over my hospital bed and
said, "God spared you for a reason." Just hearing her words gave
me a new sense of responsibility.
About four or five days later I signed
myself out of the hospital, and my mother and sister picked me up. I
remember when my mom put me in the car, she was talking to me about life,
about God. I always concerned myself with getting from point A to point B
and had already begun thinking of twenty different things I had to do; but
listening to her, I could actually feel the heat of the sun on my face. I
let the window down. I could feel the wind. By the time we made the turn
to go down the block of the neighborhood, I could actually smell the fresh
grass. I had never paid any attention to those things before, and my
mother pointed them out to me.
At the same time I was shot, my father lost
a lung to cancer. So he was in one bedroom, I was in the adjacent bedroom,
and my mom ran back and forth between us. I've got all these wounds and
dressings that have to be cleaned and changed, and the same thing with my
dad. She took care of us both and never complained. And she still worked
every day. After I recovered, my mother didn't want me to go back to the
job, but she understood why I had to do it. I had to prove that the monkey
wasn't on my back. So I went back to buying dope with her blessing.
The police got the two juveniles the same
night I got shot. They got the adult a couple of days later, and he was
later sentenced to eighty-five years in prison. The juveniles pled out:
the shooter got twenty-five years and the other one eighteen years. If it
wasn't for my mother, I could have been one of those kids. I grew up in
the Robert Taylor Homes, and there were a lot of gang bangers and drug
dealers. My mother didn't play that. On a couple of occasions these gang
bangers tried to recruit my older brother. One time I got him out of being
recruited and the other time my mother did. They were just about to start
initiations and my mother got word that they had him down at the
playground. She went down there and walked right through them, and these
guys were hardcore gang bangers. She got my brother and told him first
what they weren't going to do to him, then she turned around and told the
gang bangers what they weren't going to do to her or her son. I was with
her and said, "Are you sure you are thinking, Ma? You are going to
get us all killed." But she continued to tell them what she would do
if they ever put a hand on her son again. She took my brother by the hand
and brought him on upstairs, and the gangs never messed with him again.
Never.
My mother was hands-on. I'm telling you, my
mother could beat your ass. One time when the Isley Brothers were hot, I
wanted to go over to this girl's house to listen to the new album I had.
So I asked my mother if I could go; I was about fifteen. "Don't you
go out of this house," she told me. As soon as I heard her get into
bed, I got my albums, tiptoed out the door, and went by the girl's house.
I impressed her with my music and came on back home. I knew if I used the
back gate the latch would make noise, so I climbed over the neighbor's
fence. That's how slick I was, didn't make a sound and came in through the
back door. The second I pushed the back door open, that woman beat my ass.
In total darkness. I didn't know what the hell happened to me. A light
never came on; all you could hear was "Ooh, ow, ooh, ow, ooh, ow."
Never turned on a single light. "Now go to bed," she said. That
was my last whupping, because it was the last time I tried that lady. To
this day, we laugh about it. It's one of the family jokes. Mama can beat
your ass in total darkness. But I can't remember a time she wasn't there
for us.
My mother grew up in Mississippi working
the fields. She had to quit school, because when harvest time came all the
kids had to help my grandfather on the farm; so she never made it past the
eighth grade. Her way of providing for her children was also through
backbreaking labor. During the times when people didn't have floor
buffers, you had women on their knees buffing. My mother was one of them.
And I never realized that. So here's a woman who was getting up in the
projects at four-thirty in the morning, pitch black, going to work as a
maid. Ten hours a day working, and the only thing she had to eat was
crackers. But she never complained, not once.
Education was always the biggest thing that
she pushed, schoolwork, schoolwork, schoolwork, because she knew that that
was the only way we would be able to compete in the world. So that was her
driving force, that her kids weren't going to go through what she did. She
was never in a position where she could help us with our homework or
things like that. If she received a letter or something, she'd say,
"I can't find my glasses. Can you read this letter for me?" She
didn't want me to know that she really couldn't read the letter.
But no matter what, my mother can find
something to be positive about, even in a hurricane. That's just the way
she is. Mama would give you one of her little sayings: "Your heart is
just like a sprained ankle right now, but it's going to be okay." No
matter what, she's always pushing. Every time you thought life was over
and you couldn't go any further, she has always been there with some
encouragement.
Around the time I found out that the
contract was out on me, there were a lot of other things going on in my
life. My wife and I were splitting up. Even though we were already
separated, I asked her to hold off on the divorce because I just couldn't
deal with it at the time. Also, the reality about my son set in, that I
wouldn't be able to see him when I wanted, and he would not always have a
father around who was hands-on. I was so despondent that I called my
mother from a pay phone. I called her to say I was sorry that I had
failed. I told her that I just wanted to die. My mother said to hold on,
your father wants to talk to you. So I talked with my dad, and I didn't
know it but my mother was already on her way. She knew I was near the
expressway, on Eighty-seventh Street. She drove all around until she found
me. "If you die," she said, "then I'm going to die with
you."
With those words all thoughts of ever
wanting to leave this earth left me. So now, regardless of how despondent
I may get, I know my mother is depending on me the way I depended on her
for so long. She's my hero. I can receive all the awards, all the
accolades, but none of them mean anything in comparison to her. What I do,
I do because she was there for me. Maybe if the kid who shot me had a
mother like mine, he wouldn't be sitting where he is today.
Copyright © 1998 by Keith Michael Brown
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