The Borneo Post (Sabah)

The courage to persevere life’s blows with quiet grit

-

THE FIRST time they confiscate­d his shoelaces, Major Shabazz was nine years old. He can still remember staring at the graffiti on the jail cell’s walls, thinking about how if he ever wrote on the walls at home, his mother would kill him.

He squinted at the shapes of some green letters, but he couldn’t sound out the words. IF . . . A . . . MAN . . . Nine years old, and he knew how to fight but not how to read.

Fourteen years old, and Major couldn’t write on his mother’s walls, because a social worker took him away from her.

Fourteen, and he ran back to Lincoln Heights in Northeast as soon as he could, but his mother’s leather couches were on the curb, and the neighbours were walking away with his old bed frame. He found a picture of his family at the bottom of the pile, on the sidewalk.

Fourteen - alone, desperate.

Fifteen, and he got nickname The Stickup Kid.

Fifteen, and he was in love with a girl who drew her phone number in the palm of his hand.

Fifteen, and he was stealing cars, for the money, for the thrill, to get something to eat.

Sixteen, and in a cell again. Armed robbery, stolen vehicle, destructio­n of property, fleeing law enforcemen­t, tried as an adult and sent to federal prison. Seventeen, 18, 19. Twenty, 21, 22, 23 and he was handcuffed to a bed when he saw the familiar shape of those words, this time scratched in

angry,

the pencil. But now, he could read:

IF A MAN HASN’T DISCOVERED ANYTHING WORTH DYING FOR, THEN HE ISN’T FIT TO LIVE.

Twenty-four, and on the day he is released, he goes straight to the person worth dying for. Major’s name is tattooed on her arm, but now she has a five-yearold son.

Soon they need a place to stay and dinner to eat and “PAW Patrol” action figures for Christmas morning. Major moves into ex-offender training programmes and GED classes. He lands a few odd jobs, but no money that lasts.

Twenty-four, and he gets that old look in his eye. It would be so easy, so comfortabl­e, to go back to what he knows.

The scarier path is staying out of trouble. How hard will it be? What sacrifices will it take? To turn 25, 26, 27 and still be FIT TO LIVE?

Twenty-four, and he’s willing to find out.

--• Jessica Contrera She moved as if she were invisible through woods and swamp, travelling hundreds of miles from the South to the North and back again, carrying faith and a pistol, warning the enslaved people she freed that she would shoot anyone who tried to turn back.

Harriet Tubman figured that “there was one of two things I had a right to – liberty or death. If I could not have one, I would have the other. For no man should take me alive.”

Historic markers tracing her night-time journeys to freedom still line winding highways on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, where officials have dedicated landscapes and waterways as the Harriet Tubman Undergroun­d Railroad Historic National Park.

It is here, to the land Tubman knew so well, that men and women are still drawn - pulled by some invisible current of history. They stop at the roadside markers and wonder how Tubman succeeded. Along the shoulder, they exchange stories of amazement at Tubman’s tactics, her brilliance at avoiding capture, her stealth on those return trips she made, often dressed like a man.

“The slave catchers did not realise it was a woman helping people to escape,” said William Jarmon, a volunteer at the Harriet Tubman Museum and Education Centre. “She didn’t want to be recognised by the local people. She told the story of how once she saw her old master. He was walking on the same side of the street and he did not recognise her.”

Jarmon said Tubman “had the courage to seek freedom, when running away could mean death. She had the courage to return dozens of times for family members and other slaves, guided by the North Star, following the Undergroun­d Railroad.”

Born circa 1822 in Dorchester County, Maryland, Tubman was named Araminta Ross. She was enslaved by Edward Broadess, who hired out slaves to help pay his debts. When she was about 13, an overseer aiming for another slave threw a two-pound lead weight, hitting Araminta in the head, splitting her skull.

“She was unconsciou­s two or three days,” Jarmon said. Her owner tried to sell her as damaged property but couldn’t. When she was 26, he tried again. She pleaded with God to kill him. A week later, the slaveowner died.

In 1849, Tubman escaped with her brothers from Poplar Neck Plantation, but Ben and Henry turned back. Harriet traveled 90 miles to Pennsylvan­ia. A year later, she came back to Maryland to free her niece and the niece’s husband. In 1851, Tubman returned for her own husband, but he had taken another wife.

“In 1854, Christmas time, she came back for her brothers,” Jarmon said. “In 1857, she came back for her mother and father and went all the way to Canada with them. It was not safe for any runaway to stay in the United States.” Relentless, she returned for more. To let slaves know she was coming, she sang, “Come down, Moses.” People called her the Moses of her people. • DeNeen L. Brown You can tell a lot about a man by what he carries in his wallet.

Robert Fuller-Bey’s is fatter than most. Not with money, but with driver’s licenses. They all show a black-haired woman with delicate features. There’s the one she got in 1990. Another from when she lived on 59th Street SE. And finally, there’s the one Corneliaus Denise, Fuller-Bey’s wife, had when she died of breast cancer, in his arms, on Feb 16, 2012.

In the months after she died, the grief counsellor­s told FullerBey to stop carrying the licences. It wasn’t helping him move on, they said. They told him he had to find a new way to live. He was a young man, not even 60. He had years, still - good years.

But those pictures stayed in his wallet, even as he fell behind on bills, even as he failed to pay the US$4,961.25 he owed to his apartment complex. Even as Fuller-Bey, a welder, refused to look for work and slipped into homelessne­ss. Even as he lost touch with his kids and wandered the streets of the District, looking for his dead wife’s face in the crowds. The pictures stayed.

Grief can snuff out the will to endure. Psychologi­sts have a name for it - the “widowhood effect.” Surviving spouses, Harvard researcher­s found in 2013, are 66 per cent more likely to die in the first three months following their loved one’s death. That, more or less, was FullerBey’s plan.

But the days somehow dragged into weeks, weeks into months, and Fuller-Bey kept living. • Terrence McCoy The Chemothera­py Room at George Washington University Hospital looks like an odd beauty salon. It’s a big space lined with 17 vinyl easy chairs. On a recent morning, most are filled with patients in street clothes, reading magazines, tapping on phones, dozing as the IV bags drip, drip, drip into plastic ports implanted in their chests. Some must be here every day for months on end. Some sit for as long as five hours at a stretch, wheeling their hanging bags only to the bathroom and back.

There are curtains around the chairs, but no one has closed them. There’s a community feel in the chemo room, a lot of frank talk about cancer, insurance companies and good take-out options nearby. Dan Arndt loves the cheeseburg­ers from Burger Tap & Shake. “Let’s split one,” he says as his wife, Pat, slips on her coat. She comes to chemo with him every time, month after month. “You know how big they are,” he says. —WP-Bloomberg

Sixteen, and in a cell again. Armed robbery, stolen vehicle, destructio­n of property, fleeing law enforcemen­t, tried as an adult and sent to federal prison.

 ??  ?? Major was recently released from prison. —WP-Bloomberg photos
Major was recently released from prison. —WP-Bloomberg photos
 ??  ?? Arndt plays with grandson Jack McEvoy, 14 months old, in Annapolis.
Arndt plays with grandson Jack McEvoy, 14 months old, in Annapolis.
 ??  ?? Jarmon is seen at the Harriet Tubman museum and educationa­l center in Cambridge, Maryland.
Jarmon is seen at the Harriet Tubman museum and educationa­l center in Cambridge, Maryland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia