Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Attention Amazon: Pittsburgh

- — Judith R. Robinson

What land is this, what city? Aren’t other places as precious to those who dwell within them?

Probably they are. Well, perhaps. But here instead of sunshine there are gray skies, gloom as delicious as heavy dark beer. Green hills that slope into swift deep rivers, moving their own way, no one else’s. Old trees all over town, in the parks, lining city sidewalks,

along the broken alleys. Neighborho­ods of stone mansions. Neighborho­ods of clean aluminum-sided and redbrick houses.

Porches with swings, blooming gardens. Grand old families, lying dead in leafy cemeteries, near towers and libraries and museums and universiti­es bearing their names.

Tough old ethnic families, lying dead in leafy cemeteries, near riverbanks

where mills rose up to manufactur­e the steel for trains and autos that opened up the country; wheels and planes and tanks and weapons

that saved the world again and again.

And we the living descendant­s, the incredible mix of all here before us,

the boys and girls of the adversarie­s turned friends: Wasps and the Hunkies,

the Blacks and the Jews, the Italians and Asians, we are the heirs

to the first river traders and fur hunters, the freed slaves,

the immigrant industrial barons and immigrant mill hands. And that sometimes adversaria­l past. The burning truth of Out Of This Furnace. The ‘36 confrontat­ion at Republican Steel. The birth agony of big steel and big labor. And since, the death agony, too. Okay. A grand old city (old for America, that is) with an interestin­g past, wonderful people, a lousy climate (some think).

So why the heart pull, looking at the hills? Hills, you might say, are hills.

But we who live here know something. Pittsburgh’s been good to us.

We forgive. We co-exist. We get along.

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