Click here
for printer-friendly version
As our country celebrated its annual commemoration
of freedom from tyranny this July, I couldn't help thinking
about five middle-aged grandmothers I know. I met them
when I first became New Haven's police chief. They wanted
to talk about freedom, specifically about the lack of
freedom, because of guns.
I thought about them this July because of one of those
curious confluences of transatlantic history. In Great
Britain, Parliament was banning all handguns. It had
seen enough civilian massacres. The public overwhelmingly
supported the ban.
Meanwhile, here on our shores -- in a nation founded
on a declaration against British tyranny -- our Supreme
Court was dismantling the one mild attempt at gun control
that our gun-lobby-engorged Congress has been able to
pass, the Brady Bill.
Apparently even a brief delay in selling people guns
so we can keep them out of the hands of deadly nuts
is considered too much of a "threat" to freedom. Meanwhile,
we have 200 million guns keeping Americans prisoners
in their own homes. We have more than 35,000 gun-related
deaths a year. And that's just deaths. That doesn't
begin to count the spinal, brain and other traumatic
injuries that make people vegetables or confine them
to wheelchairs for the rest of their lives.
The five middle-aged grandmothers were American prisoners
of the gun. They live in a section of New Haven called
Newhallville, a working class African American neighborhood.
I met them in 1990 while walking the neighborhood to
introduce and reintroduce myself to people. They came
to my office on a subsequent day and told me how they
were bringing up their grandchildren. The five of them
fought back tears as they described huddling with their
grandchildren behind stoves, cuddling with them in bathtubs,
to avoid bullets that were randomly flying through their
windows.
New Haven, like other American cities, had seen its
various poverty-related problems become deadly thanks
to the handgun. Kids were carrying guns around because
they felt they had to, either to be cool, or just to
keep safe. "I've got to get a gun because he's got a
gun." That was the thinking.
The results for the cops: They requested, understandably,
more firepower to keep up with the Uzis on the street.
Understandably, they wanted to wear bullet-proof vests.
It was an arms race played out on a neighborhood, rather
than a superpower stage. The vest may make a cop safer
for a day, but it unfortunately becomes another step
in arming ourselves for war rather than moving toward
peace.
This Independence Day I was fortunate enough to be
invited to a block party in Newhallville, on Pond Street.
The guns don't imprison people there these days. Instead,
the people have planted flowers. Seriously. The neighbors
started planting flowers on their properties and getting
to know each other in the process. They got kids involved.
They unified, and worked with police to provide information
on trouble-makers. Rather than arming themselves to
shoot intruders, they used seeds, unity and cooperation.
Each July 4th, they have a contest for best flower plantings
and loads of fun and games for the kids.
While violence remains a real problem in Newhallville,
and in all American cities, crime is also down. Gun
violence, in particular, is down. New Haven's cops,
working with people like the grandmothers who came to
see me, like the neighbors on Pond Street, found that
the old strategy of naked force only begets violence.
It didn't cut it down.
Instead of guns, cops used their intelligence, through
information-gathering, to bust gangs. They talk trust
with the law-abiding majority of citizens. They even
built respect from the non-law abiding citizens whom
they ended up disarming. Neighbors formed a management
team to work together on not just police issues, but
neighborhood renewal.
We've learned that police can't go it alone with guns.
We have to communicate. Even when a cop has no choice
but to use a gun, that gunshot still traumatizes the
cops involved and the community. It is hardly a long-term
solution.
In all our cities, despite the drop in violence, we
still have lots of work to do to counteract that tyranny
of the gun. We'd do well to shake off our centuries-old
sense of superiority of Britain and see how the Queen's
Parliament has learned some truths about freedom that
we freedom-lovers have yet to absorb.
Nick Pastore