The Morning Call (Sunday)

How having a Black grandson opened my eyes

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“Would you let your daughter marry a Black man?” It was the fall of 1985, in the Cincinnati Bengals locker room. I had just stood up to put on my shoulder pads for practice.

I was a 27-year-old slot receiver from a small school (Lehigh University) in Pennsylvan­ia. Bobby Kemp, our strong safety, was asking the question from a distance of about 12 inches. Lots of teammates were watching.

“Um, yeah — but I would want her to know what all she’s getting into.” (Why’s he asking me this? Aren’t we friends?)

This wasn’t the first time Bobby had asked a question like this. A year earlier, just as I got up to put on my shoulder pads, there he was, 12 inches away, eyes flashing. I had been sitting at my locker, doing my usual nerdy thing and trying to get some reading done for my graduate school classes in finance.

This time the question was, “All this junk you’re always readin’ — have you ever read James Baldwin?” “Um, no. No, I haven’t.” (Why’s he asking me this? Aren’t we friends?)

So there I was, seventh year in the league, a few months from finishing a Ph.D., thinking the U.S. was headed in a good direction. Black players on the team were friendly to me. There were Black people making some progress in business and the profession­s.

In general, it seemed that people understood that it was bad to be racist. There was reason to be optimistic — confident even.

This is how I thought about things for a long time. And then in 2007 my college-age son fell in love with a woman who happened to be Black. I began to hear things I never heard before.

Speaking about Black friends who were engineerin­g graduates from Princeton, holding high-paying jobs and driving BMWs and other high end cars, “Dad, you know they get stopped while driving around Princeton? In this fancy town? And they have to hold onto the steering wheel with both hands and be super courteous and sweat and hope and pray they don’t get shot. This happens all the time. It is a regular part of their life — this fear.”

And “Dad, the kids couldn’t tell you, but when you were coaching our little 10-year-old kids’ football team, when we would go to those games out in the rural counties, a lot of the Black kids were really scared. Their parents told them not to go there because there’s a lot of crazy people out there who want to kill them. They were really terrified.”

I grew up in Wernersvil­le, Berks County, in the 1960s (one Black family in town) and went to high school in the 1970s at Schuylkill Valley in Leesport, Berks County (no Black students grades 7 to 12) and college at Lehigh in Bethlehem (39 Black students out of 4,000).

When I share these stories with my high school buddies, they say, “C’mon, you’re exaggerati­ng.” And they honestly believe that I am overreacti­ng. They are confident in their views. When I ask how they know, they say they just know.

And then the subject changes and we go on. All of a piece with how I blithely ignored Bobby’s questions way back.

My son is now in his 30s and he and his wife have a son. My daughters live with their families in a well-to-do Philly suburb in Bucks County and have been encouragin­g my son and his wife to move close to them.

He asks me, “Dad, how do I tell them that my wife is afraid to live there?” “Dad, if you were a 22-year-old Black man, would you go for a jog in the neighborho­od where you and mom live?”

It is worse than shameful that it took having a Black grandson to make me think, “What is it like to be a Black person in the U.S.”? To read James Baldwin. To start reading “Stamped From the Beginning” and “The Ways of White Folks,” etc. But that’s what happened.

Bobby died by suicide in 1998. Was it because of CTE — the brain trauma disease caused by all those hits? A white, longtime NFL coach was quoted saying, “I don’t think so. He was a tortured soul.”

Was he tortured by the stress of trying to “live while Black” in the U.S.? By the frustratio­n that people like me would not give the time of day to think about what it was like to be a Black person in this country and to have the basic decency to recognize it and try to help make it right?

Did I have a role in his suicide?

Martin Luther King Jr. said, “The arc of the moral universe is long but it bends toward justice.” If I were Black, could I wait all this time? I get impatient at long red lights. How could I tolerate this longstandi­ng injustice?

Bobby, I was wrong. I can’t make it right. I don’t even understand it all yet. But maybe I can make it a little better, one day at a time. By sharing your story. And by helping others realize we need to look at everyone as one of our family.

George Floyd is everyone’s brother or cousin or uncle. Or grandson.

Steve Kreider grew up in Berks County and graduated from Lehigh University in 1979. He played receiver for the Cincinnati Bengals for eight years, earning a Ph.D. in economics from the University of Cincinnati. He has worked in investment management and serves as the chairman of his family office, Harrow Capital.

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? Cincinnati Bengals receiver Steve Kreider hugs the ball as Pittsburgh Steelers defender Anthony Washington tries to knock it loose after a completion during a game Oct. 18, 1981.
AP FILE PHOTO Cincinnati Bengals receiver Steve Kreider hugs the ball as Pittsburgh Steelers defender Anthony Washington tries to knock it loose after a completion during a game Oct. 18, 1981.
 ??  ?? Steve Kreider
Steve Kreider

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