Acushnet
SouthCoast
Coastin'
Calendar
Today's Yahoo |
Radical 'legend' never lost his fire By John Doherty, Standard-Times staff writer
NEW
BEDFORD -- Toward the end of his life, frail, graying and with a
spider-web crack on the lens of his crumbling glasses, Parky Grace could
still make comfortable people nervous.
Reflective and agitated this past August as the 29th anniversary of his
arrest for murder passed, Frank "Parky" Grace sat down with a reporter in
Fall River's Regatta Restaurant. As the
lunch clientele of all white, mostly senior citizen diners shot him
nervous glances, Mr. Grace held forth on a variety of topics: He described
the casual brutality inside the Walpole State Prison, extolled the virtues
of a vegetarian diet, recounted recent fist fights, and dissected the
government's program of exterminating his beloved Black Panthers. He
began the meal by demanding, with a straight face, that the bartender hand
over all the money. A joke, he explained. He ended it by announcing to the
waitress that he had no money, and asked to be shown where he could wash
the dishes in trade. "I'm
dying, man," he said at one point, staring out the window at the boats
moored along the river. On
Monday, after two weeks in a Boston Veterans Administration Hospital where
his liver gave out, Parky Grace, founder of New Bedford's Black Panther
Party, Vietnam veteran, teacher, father and once-convicted of murder,
died. He was 56. Mr.
Grace's passing sent ripples through the fragmented community of local
radicals from the late 1960s and early 1970s that turned New Bedford and
the nation on its ear. "Parky
wouldn't sit still for anything," said R. Carleen Cordwell, a member of
the Panthers and one of many city supporters who fought to have Mr.
Grace's 1974 murder conviction overturned. "People who didn't know him
were afraid of him. If you knew him, you loved him." And to
a new generation of community activists, death has brought the fiery and
contradictory Mr. Grace full legend status. "He put
himself out there for the things he believed in. You think of Parky and
you think 'strong.' Period," said Tyson Rose, 28, a member of the Suns of
Panthers, a community-building group in the city that borrows many of the
Black Panthers' core beliefs. "At the age when most of the activists in
his generation settled down and became 'grown-ups,' Parky didn't. He never
changed. Parky is a legend." Mr.
Grace was one of the strongest links to a period of the city that in
retrospect seems too weird, too intense to have really happened. But it
did happen, and at some of the most dramatic crossroads, Mr. Grace was
there. Growing
up in New Bedford, Mr. Grace had a reputation as a kind, but tough, Cape
Verdean kid. "He was
tough; he was a horror show. He was a very skilled fighter and he was very
courageous," said Ms. Cordwell. "He wasn't afraid of anything." He was
drafted into the Army and saw combat duty in the Vietnam War -- an
experience that left him with post-traumatic stress syndrome, he said this
summer. But it
also left him radicalized. Ms.
Cordwell said many young black men returned from Vietnam with their eyes
opened. "The
Vietnamese schooled a lot of the brothers," she said. "It's like they say,
sometimes you don't get to know your country until you leave it." Like
many young black men, Mr. Grace began organizing. He
helped start a free-breakfast program for children in the city and the
Panthers began organizing a battery of after-school programs. They took
over city councilors' seats during meetings and demanded the
administration address sub-standard housing, failing schools and police
brutality. They
became affiliated with other radical causes, like the independence
movement in the former Portuguese colonies of Cape Verde and
Guinea-Bissau. But
there was trouble brewing. Then,
as now, drugs played a huge equation in city affairs. "We
were robbing drug dealers," said Ms. Cordwell. "We were putting them out
of business and people were getting involved with them." In
1970, nights of violence in the West End left blocks of houses burnt, and
one man dead. Two
years later, Mr. Grace and his brother Ross were arrested for shooting a
Providence drug dealer to death outside a social club. They
were both convicted, and a long campaign to free them was under way.
Mr.
Grace didn't let prison stop him. He organized prisoners and agitated for
better treatment. To slow him, he was transferred, again and again, to
different federal prisons. He spent years in solitary confinement.
In
1985, his conviction was overturned, and the man who had come to embody
unbreakable idealism returned to a city whose political fire had all but
gone out. "He
came back to New Bedford and he was disappointed," said Jack Custodio, 87,
himself a tireless activist. "He never changed." He
moved to the Boston area, and the last 10 years of his life are filled
with gaps. He
worked at the Freedom House in Roxbury, a community nonprofit led by the
Rev. Eugene Rivers. He
lived on and off with a couple in Medford, and was in their house when he
finally checked himself into the hospital earlier this month. But he
drifted. He said over lunch at the Regatta he hated to spend too much time
in New Bedford; many people who knew him as a street-tough Black Panther
started arguments and fights with him to get a name for themselves. Worse,
others knew nothing of his struggles, and paid him no mind at all.
Mr.
Custodio, who also never lost his radical streak -- he spent a night in
Ash Street Jail this month after disrupting another School Committee
meeting and calling the mayor a racist -- hadn't talked to his kindred
spirit for two years, he said. "The
thing about Uncle Parky was he was uncompromiseable," said his nephew Ross
Park Jr., who himself has become a activist. He works at the Frederick
Douglass Unity House at UMass Dartmouth. "That's a strength and a
weakness." For
others, the legacy of Mr. Grace will be both a spur to action, and a
caution. The
city's Black Panther organization was derailed by its involvement with
criminal elements. That can be a lesson to the new generation of
activists, some say. "I'm
not going to lie, I don't know everything about Parky and the Panthers,"
said Temistocles Ferreira, who works at YouthBuild and fronts hip-hop band
Busted 'Fro. "The thing you get out of his story is the pride and the
strength. But we also get to see where they fell off track. We can see how
not to fall into the same traps. I wish there was a book we could go to
learn about all these guys. I wish we had Parky Grace here now." |
|
| Top /
Subscribe / Letters to Editor / Contact Webmaster / Staff Directory Please mail any comments to [email protected] Call us at 508-997-7411 |