Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

I’m filled with so many stories to tell

- JOHN W. FOUNTAIN author@johnwfount­ain.com | @JohnWFount­ain

This is my swan song. I peck the keys of my MacBook Pro amid these dancing blue waters that lap at this shore, where majestic skyscraper­s glisten in the summer evening sun. Here where I grew up a ghetto boy on the West Side, where I was introduced by Mama to the virtues of a newspaper.

I don’t remember the first time I creased the hometown paper, held it in between my fingers, or ingested it. Or when I grew to respect newspapers, their power and purpose.

I was raised on newspapers back when we had only a portable black-and-white TV and the newspaper brought the world to life in living color. Mama collected a stack in a hard plastic kitchen chair in our two-bedroom apartment in K-Town, North Lawndale — once dubbed “The American Millstone.”

I don’t remember the first time I inhaled the fresh scent of print. But I remember Mama’s daily regimen: a hot cup of Maxwell House instant coffee and devouring a Sun-Times front to back. This was her newspaper of choice. Not that other conservati­ve, aloof broadsheet. The Sun-Times, in Mama’s mind, was “the paper of the people.”

Mama grilled me on the news as we sat in the kitchen, sunlight spilling. Encouraged me to read the paper. To become a connoisseu­r of print.

As a teenager, I bought the Sun-Times from the neighborho­od newsstand sometimes on my way to catch the Pulaski Road bus north to Providence St. Mel School. I’d consume the sports pages first, then scour the Page 1 headlines, moving quickly to Mike Royko. His columns made me laugh out loud, think, smile, feel.

And even as a kid who dreamed

of becoming a lawyer, I found a deep appreciati­on for newspaper storytelli­ng. I was intrigued by the thought of being a vehicle for the stories of life, love, hope, humanity, even tragedy.

For as far back as I can remember, I wrote stories. About talking leaves, anything my mind could conjure. I fell in love with writing, with seeing and hearing students’ responses as I read aloud in Mrs. Thomas’ class at Mason School. I discovered I had a gift.

In college, I sought to develop the craft of journalist­ic writing, lured away from my dream of becoming an attorney by an English professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, who, after reading an essay I had written, suggested I might pursue a career in journalism.

I did. My career took me first to the Chicago Tribune after a slew of newspaper internship­s, including

one at the Sun-Times, then eventually to the Washington Post and The New York Times.

After a career as a reporter, I was minding my own business in 2010 when then-Sun-Times editorial page editor Tom McNamee offered the opportunit­y to write a weekly column for the hometown paper. I was reluctant: drive-by cyber sniping against columnists; the courage and costs associated with writing what one thinks and feels; the complete absence of any other local Black male journalist­s at either of Chicago’s two major daily newspapers (not happenstan­ce).

The battle scars of reporting

while Black in mainstream American journalism that had not yet healed. The prevailing sense of disrespect for Black journalist­s, for our voices and thought, particular­ly that born and bred on the other side of the tracks.

And yet, I decided to give it a go. For the last nearly 13 years, I have been faithful. Faithful to what I believe, faithful to telling stories typically MIA from American journalism — stories of Black life, love, hope, humanity, even tragedy. Faithful in doing my best to give voice to the voiceless. To use my pen to try and make a difference here in the Chi and beyond.

I have been faithful and true to myself and to journalism in a newspaper town, where Royko, Studs Terkel, Leanita McClain, Vernon Jarrett, Lu Palmer, Roi Ottley, and others sought through their commentary to make this great city on a lake shine brighter.

It is not for me to say how well I’ve done. Only that I did my very best. And that this ghetto boy is grateful for the opportunit­y. Grateful to you the reader, and grateful to Mama. Even as I exit at this my swan song as a weekly columnist on this newspaper’s editorial pages.

I peck my computer keyboard in the breeze and summer sun, a freed Black journalist. Still filled with so many stories to tell. Look for me on the news side of this newspaper.

But for now, Fountain out.

AND EVEN AS A KID WHO DREAMED OF BECOMING A LAWYER, I FOUND A DEEP APPRECIATI­ON FOR NEWSPAPER STORYTELLI­NG. I WAS INTRIGUED BY THE THOUGHT OF BEING A VEHICLE FOR THE STORIES OF LIFE, LOVE, HOPE, HUMANITY, EVEN TRAGEDY.

#JusticeFor­JelaniDay

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 ?? PROVIDED BY JOHN FOUNTAIN ?? John Fountain (cap in hand on right) as a little boy with his grandmothe­r and other members of his West Side clan on a family outing (circa 1960s).
PROVIDED BY JOHN FOUNTAIN John Fountain (cap in hand on right) as a little boy with his grandmothe­r and other members of his West Side clan on a family outing (circa 1960s).

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