Mark Alan Lovewell

Looking Back to Move Forward

It took a few weeks, but I can no longer watch the news of the country I no longer live in.

It took a few weeks, but I can no longer watch the news, the phalanxes of police, all geared-up like modern day gladiators in cities all over the country I no longer live in. I can’t stomach watching people being shot at with rubber bullets, knocked to the ground, shoved, dragged, beaten with batons, teargassed and pepper spayed. Some of these enforcers have even taped over their badge numbers to avoid identification as though they were above reproach, members of a private army with complete immunity.

I had to stop watching. When I finally did, I found myself questioning my own beliefs more deeply. The violence was nothing new, we’ve just gotten used to it until it finally boiled over, surprising some more than others.

So now I’m thinking a lot about a skinny 12-year-old kid named Lenny. We were the same age when his family moved into the house next door to mine. It was 1966 and the streets were filled with neighborhood kids playing together, including Lenny the newcomer. Lenny was a member of the only black family in the entire neighborhood, an average, all-white middle-class suburb. He and his older sister Nadine were also the only black kids in the entire school of nearly 2,000 students. His dad worked curbside at Kennedy Airport as a baggage handler. We called them Skycaps in those days. His mom worked as a surgical nurse in one of the big New York city hospitals. Until then I didn’t know anyone whose mom worked. On evenings and weekends his dad sold insurance in the all-black neighborhoods, which I knew existed but had never actually seen.

Lenny was immediately part of that large group of kids who played whiffle-ball in the street, rode their stingrays all over the place and learned all the lyrics to the new Beatles songs. Both of us played the violin and were in the seventh grade school orchestra together. I had taken lessons for six years and struggled to make anything even resembling music. Lenny was a musical prodigy and after his tryout was immediately moved up to first chair in the string section. He also had a full drum kit in the basement of his house which immediately made him quite popular with the rest of us adolescent boys. It turned out I was as bad on the drums as I was on the violin. Maybe worse.

About two years later we entered high school and Lenny seemed to vanish. Nadine disappeared too but we heard that she was so unhappy living there that she’d gone to live with relatives somewhere in Ohio.

By the early 1970s a handful of black students arrived at my high school, the result of mandatory busing. They had their own table in the school cafeteria at lunch and kept entirely to themselves. I don’t recall ever seeing Lenny sitting with them, but I also don’t recall seeing much of him anywhere else either. I knew he was still next door because he played his drums every afternoon for hours while I tried to do my homework accompanied by an endless rendition of Wipeout. It never occurred to me that it might have been his only outlet, an expression of frustration or maybe even rage. When I returned home from college after my freshman year they had moved away.

I learned a lot more about Lenny and his family 50 years later from a woman on Martha’s Vineyard who had never even met them. She walked into my West Tisbury store, Fiddlehead Farm, one morning. I introduced myself and when I asked her name, she said Michele and before she could say her last name it popped out of my mouth: “Norris.”

Although we had never met, the unique pronunciation of Michele (closer to Mee-shel ) and the sound of her voice tipped me off. I had listened to her for years on NPR and was a huge fan and told her so.

She came back the following day and gave me a copy of The Grace of Silence, her book about growing up as a black child in an all-white Minnesota suburb. Her story seemed instantly familiar to me, especially how her father made sure he had the nicest lawn on the block, a freshly painted house, an impeccably waxed car in the driveway and kids that were always well groomed, polite and studious. Her story filled in a lot of the blanks. After reading Michele’s book I realized I never really understood the depths of the struggle my neighbors had to contend with, and the sense of isolation Lenny and his sister must have suffered daily. I found an old photograph of a group of us at my birthday party. Lenny is standing slightly off to one side looking completely lost and alone.

I hope Lenny and Nadine found prosperity, happiness and acceptance in their adult lives, and wish them well wherever they may be and I’d hate to think their feelings eventually turned towards bitterness, which given the odds, I now know is more likely. It pains me to realize after so many years that the halcyon days of my youth were nowhere near the same for them.

Lenny’s parents struggled against the odds every day hoping to overcome things for the sake of their children, obstacles I was never aware of. I want to believe that the example they set mattered in the end. I also want to hang onto the belief that America is finally and fully willing to accept the challenge of change, now more than ever.

Robert Skydell lives in Granada, Nicaragua.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 06/16/2020 - 10:07

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John Keohane Milton MA

Thank you for sharing that I sincerely hope we are finally going to change, that this time will be different

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 06/16/2020 - 20:51

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Deedee Geib Virginia

This makes me weep. Beautifully written. Thank you Mr. Skydell.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 06/16/2020 - 21:12

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islandgirl WT

I suspect, am almost sure om fact. that there is such an epiphany in the memories that many of us carry around. At least I hope that there is. There ought to be some sort of spiritual ground -- a middle place -- where all can meet in emotional and physical safety for all and work through some of the details so that more of us can meet as friends and "buddies." forever. That probably won't happen. Racism (and too many other "isms") is too deeply ingrained and the current administration and the role models in charge care only for lining their pockets rather than ethical issues.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 06/17/2020 - 07:34

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Dana Nunes Chilmark

Ouch! I might have been Lenny, if I’d been male and had any talent, at all. I was a young, black girl, growing up in an almost completely white town in the sixties. As such, the best word that could describe my being then, would be inconsequential. We had a big, historic home, with a perfectly manicured yard and the Studebaker station wagon in the driveway. None of that meant anything to me. I was tormented by the same three guys every day from second grade to sixth grade. I could pretty much daily expect a punch to the stomach and the N-word. It took a child who had loved learning in the first grade, and turned her into one who’s only focus was to always be on guard for the next attack. The teachers turned a blind eye. As a teenager, I made a decision: I could hate white people, or I could be kind, and take each person on their own merits, one at a time. I chose kindness. The anger remains but it’s a quiet anger. As a friend of mine commented several years ago, not knowing my history, “You’ve got a chip on your shoulder.” She had no idea.
I hope Lenny and Nadine, as adults, also sought out the goodness in people, rather than picking the scabs off of old wounds. It’s a painful and pointless endeavor. And life is way too short.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 06/17/2020 - 10:21

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Rosalia Milone Charlestown, MA

Very touching article. I have shared it with many friends and colleagues, in fact. It's never too late to change, learn, and everyone can be a teacher. It has to come from within and matter. To you!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 06/18/2020 - 09:11

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Susan New York, New York

George Orwell said that people who advocate radical violence
are usually the ones who are always far from where the bullets are flying.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 12/24/2020 - 09:23

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