A Prayer for the City (18 page)

Read A Prayer for the City Online

Authors: Buzz Bissinger

Rendell may have been taken aback by the power plays of racial politics, but he was also powerfully swayed by them. He had a deep commitment to the black community in the city, and while much of the criticism he sustained as mayor barely seemed to bother him, the one charge that set his temper afire was the charge of racism. But beyond commitment, Rendell also had a political need to keep black elected officials happy and contented. He did not want to raise their ire, as doing so might in turn galvanize the black community, which might in turn encourage a black candidate to run against him in 1995. He knew he was potentially vulnerable.

There was not a major decision or a major personnel move that Rendell contemplated without first screening it for racial acceptability, whether it was the selection of a new police commissioner, a new head of the housing authority, a new appointee to the school board, or a new school superintendent. He even got involved in the race of those picked up by the police in racially sensitive cases. Like ordering from a Chinese menu, if you had
one from column A (the black column), you’d better be sure to have one from column B (the white column) as well.

Less than twenty-four hours after the mayor met with leaders in the Hispanic community and less than thirty-six hours after he met with angry whites, he met privately with a gathering of African American leaders in the Cabinet Room at 7:30
A.M.
The ostensible purpose of the meeting was to discuss the fatal police shooting of a man named Charlie Matthews in West Philadelphia the previous month. Matthews had been hit twenty-two times by eight different officers. The police originally alleged that Matthews had shot an officer, but later investigation showed that the officer had been wounded by fire from another officer’s gun. Matthews did have a gun, but investigation showed that it was not loaded.

“Does anybody care what happens to the African American community in this city?” asked Reverend Jerome Cooper, who was the first to speak. “Does anyone care when an African American is cut down? I want you, Mr. Mayor, to tell us what your moral leadership is in this case. I want you, Mr. Mayor, to tell us what we can expect.”

There was the clear implication that Rendell, for what could be interpreted only as reasons of racial insensitivity, hadn’t been nearly as concerned about the fatal shooting of Charlie Matthews as he had been about the fatal shooting of Robbie Burns. But the raw assertion did not take into account the radically different circumstances of the two cases. Robbie Burns was a bystander on a street corner who had been shot from a car. Matthews, apparently inebriated, had threatened a little girl in the neighborhood with a gun. When police arrived to respond to a complaint, Matthews answered the door with a gun in his hand and refused to drop it. Far from being buried, the case was in the hands of the district attorney, whose office was evaluating the charges of misconduct against the officers involved. When Rendell tried to explain the city’s handling of the Matthews case to those present, discussion of it was dropped since the harpoon had already been fired anyway. Instead, the mayor was roundly criticized for his handling of another incident, one in which a black family, after moving into an all-white neighborhood, had reportedly been harassed and attacked by white residents over the July Fourth weekend. State Senator Hardy Williams accused the mayor of not reaching out to the family.

Rendell worked feverishly to remain calm, pointing out that Williams’s assertions were not true. He had reached out to the family through intermediaries, and the family members themselves had decided that they did
not want to become transparent symbols for the fodder of politicians. Instead, they just wanted to leave the neighborhood. In addition, when two blacks had been arrested for their involvement in the incident, the mayor, after personally reviewing the case, had ordered that a white participant be arrested as well. “We didn’t try to make them into political statements,” said Rendell of the family in question. “They wanted to low-key it. They wanted to leave.”

But Williams didn’t appear to be listening. Rather, he had a loud and distinct message:
“Many people in Philadelphia think the mayor really don’t care.”

Another minister stepped in and said that the city was actually pressuring the family into leaving its home. She also claimed that the family had tried to contact the mayor’s office and had been rebuffed.

Rendell leaped out of his chair at the head of the table, words tunneling out from between his teeth with venom, the pallid grayness of his face from pressure and lack of sleep bursting into a menacing red. He could no longer listen to falsehoods and badgering with a sweet smile of conciliation on his face.
“That is baloney! That is baloney! I answer every phone call and every letter twenty-four hours a day! I am not going to let untruths be spoken here!”

Those gathered in the room seemed almost to enjoy the image of a virginal mayor responding to charges of racial insensitivity by screaming at the top of his lungs.

“He’s psychotic!” said Williams in a loud whisper to another member of the group.

With the mayor more exposed and weaker than ever, the harpoons continued.

“We need something clear and stated through your office that you do have a concern for all the people in Philadelphia, not just West Kensington. Not just white Catholics,” said the Reverend Paul Anderson. “A white man is shot in the head and the mayor and the archbishop are out there immediately. The perception is that these four individuals are of more value to you, possibly because the complexion of the man killed was lighter than mine.”

Rendell, groping to regain control, said that maybe Anderson was right: he had not been as vocal in voicing concern about the Matthews shooting as he had been in showing concern about the Burns shooting, but it was not because of any purposeful agenda. Instead, he noted that he had been in the hospital for minor surgery on his elbow when the Matthews shooting had
taken place. He then turned the discussion back to the city’s handling of the family that had been harassed and asked the Reverend James Allen, the chairman of the city’s Commission on Human Relations, to reiterate that the city had never pressured the family to move.

“What’s the point of this?” snapped Hardy Williams.

Rendell said that it was important to make everyone understand that the city had not tried to force the family to leave.

“This is not what we’re meeting about!” snapped Williams, although it was utterly unclear what the meeting was about, other than to see how the mayor would respond with three or four racial harpoons in his side.

“Come on, let’s go!” Williams suddenly said to those who were gathered.

Rendell, still at the head of the table, calmly beseeched the leaders to stay, all too aware of how it would look if the press reported that a group of black leaders seeking the mayor’s humane response to their concerns had marched out of a meeting with him in a huff.

But with the exception of one minister, they all left.

“Goddamn it!” yelled Williams as he left the Cabinet Room, slamming the door with such theatricality that the room reverberated.

“I was here ready to discuss,” said Rendell to the lone remaining minister. “I am embarrassed for the people who got up and left. If they are men of the cloth, I am embarrassed.”

He also felt that in the game of racial politics he had been set up. Although he could not prove it, the departure by Williams and the ministers seemed staged, designed to send him the unsubtle message that these kinds of contentious skirmishes would become routine unless he started paying a little bit more attention to their agenda. He knew the media would seize upon what had happened, particularly since a notice of the meeting had been placed on the public relations news wire, which went to all the major newsrooms. With the departure of Philadelphia Police Commissioner Willie Williams for Los Angeles, the mayor was also involved in the crucial process of finding a new commissioner, and he felt that the real purpose of the walkout, much like a warning shot through a picture window, was to let him know what would happen if he picked a white rather than a black replacement.

If nothing else, Rendell could take some solace in hitting the racial trifecta. On Monday, working-class whites had accused him of being callous and insensitive to their needs. On Tuesday, Hispanic leaders had accused him of being callous and insensitive to their needs. On Wednesday, black
leaders had accused him of being callous and insensitive to their needs. The only elements missing were the fringe groups—Asian Americans, Italian Americans, gays and lesbians, the disabled, advocates for the homeless. But Rendell knew from past experience that their lack of participation was not a matter of restraint but was a matter of the groups’ own difficulty in figuring out a way to inject themselves into this particular situation. Robbie Burns wasn’t gay. He wasn’t Asian. He wasn’t homeless. He hadn’t died in a wheelchair trying to negotiate a sidewalk that didn’t have a federally mandated curb cut. But the mayor also knew that at some point during his administration all these special interest groups would be paying him visits, claiming woe and oppression and misunderstanding with such heartfelt poignancy that even the members of the press they leaked the contents of the meetings to would be reduced to tears if they weren’t on deadline. Several months later Mark Segal, publisher of the
Philadelphia Gay News
, would tell the mayor with all the profound outrage he could muster, “Do you know you don’t have a single lesbian in the administration?” Several months later State Senator Hardy Williams would be back in the Cabinet Room, this time claiming a conspiracy in the failure of a black police officer to get a promotion. Well trained by this point, the mayor would muster every ounce of goodwill and personally order a police review of the officer’s file. The review would reveal that dismissal proceedings had been started after traces of cocaine were found on the officer’s person. Several weeks later a group of Italian Americans, refusing to believe that a slip of the tongue was all that lay behind the dyslexic head of the city’s art commission referring to a color as “dago red” instead of “Day-Glo red,” would stomp into the Cabinet Room and tell the mayor they would march in protest unless the man was fired.

It was in the middle of the white-hot heat of that meeting at the McVeigh gym in Kensington, with those layers of mist rising toward the ceiling, that a woman in sandals and shorts had come to the front of the stage. Her name was Mary Jane Burns, the mother of Robbie Burns, and although she had lost more than anyone else in that gym, she was the least angry. “My son Robbie was a peacemaker who did not believe in vengeance or rowdiness,” she said. “Everyone is doing what they can do. Take one step at a time.”

The decency of those words struck a momentary chord. Rendell, on the way back home that night, seemed dazzled by such dignity in the face of such loss. “I mean if it was my son, Jesse, I’d be the loudest fucking one. I could never do what she did.” But in the aftermath, the jockeying for position
and the probing of the mayor’s underside for weakness, the message of those words—peace, forgiveness, healing—had been forgotten in less than forty-eight hours. In the political world of the city, a city of fiefdoms and feudal lords and warring bands of self-interest, the death of Robbie Burns wasn’t much of a tragedy to anyone beyond his friends and family.

It was the perfect opportunity.

 5 
“Watch Out”
I

B
etween the rows of spectators and the judge’s bench, in that small and claustrophobic space where lawyers perform their theatrics of shock and sympathy in the name of justice, Michael McGovern awaited the verdict.

A month had passed since the killing of Robbie Burns, and politicians in the city, realizing that they had picked the victim’s bones clean and could gain no more from instant indignation, had gone on to other pursuits. The fissures of race remained, but when McGovern grappled with them in a courtroom in the continuing heat of the summer, the very trial itself revealing
the soul of a city so very much torn by hate and misunderstanding, not a single politician was there to listen.

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