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UPDATED: MAR 15, 2019 · ORIGINAL: JUN 1, 2018

Appreciating Bobby Kennedy's Stunning


Transformation
In the aftermath of his brother’s tragic death, RFK became a fearless
champion for the underrepresented.

KEVIN POWELL

What does one say about a hero like Robert Francis Kennedy that has not
been said already? I do not even recall when I first discovered “Bobby.” All I
knew from childhood was his brother John, the president who had been killed,
and I knew that many black households, no matter the class or status, were
likely to have photos of John and Bobby, with the Rev. Doctor Martin Luther
King, Jr. in the middle.

When I was a child, adults would speak in hushed tones about how they had
all been killed: a president, a leader for black people and the president’s kid
brother. It never dawned on me, throughout my youth and into my early adult
years, to ask what Bobby had done—or, rather, what he had done to get
himself killed. My curiosity always rested on his brother John, the 35
president. From elementary school through college, Bobby simply was never
mentioned in my social studies, history, government or politics classes.
It was not until the early 1990s, after college, that I even began thinking about
Bobby Kennedy—and it was not positive. I remember thinking that Bobby was
arrogant. That Bobby was a bully. That Bobby was his big brother John’s
ruthless guardian of everything political, and reckless in his pursuit of
suspected Communists and reputed mobsters. That Bobby saw himself as
holier than others. That Bobby only got to be attorney general of the United
States because of nepotism. And that as attorney general, a role designed to
protect all Americans, Bobby was at times utterly clueless about the vicious
racism in his own country. On his watch, civil-rights protesters were beaten
and hosed and set upon by dogs. On his watch, the infamous head of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, J. Edgar Hoover decided to wiretap Dr. King,
and Bobby went along. It has been suggested RFK agreed to do this to deflect
Hoover from exposing the president’s string of extramarital dalliances, so the
F.B.I. homed in on King’s lengthy spreadsheet of affairs instead.

This was the Bobby that people did not like—liberals and conservatives, white
folks and black folks alike. They perceived an absence of compassion and
empathy for those beyond his immediate circle. And an insatiable thirst for
power and control, by any means necessary. This is what the Kennedy boys
had been raised to be: men of prestige, men of fortune, men of power.
Bobby’s privilege, it seemed, blinded him to the everyday realities—and
struggles—of the average American citizen.

But then a singular event changed that forever: President John F. Kennedy was
gunned down, in broad daylight. A vast nation had its love affair with Camelot
abruptly dashed, and Bobby had lost his best friend, his big brother, his
political twin—and his political shield. I can only imagine that he descended
into an emotional darkness that felt, perhaps, like the way poor Irish people
must’ve felt during the potato famine. Or the darkness Native Americans felt
when Europeans stole their land, stomped their culture and massacred their
people. Or perhaps the deep darkness Africans felt when they were kidnapped
from their motherland, stuffed into ships like cargo, and brought to a strange
new place as slaves, to be the victims of a very ugly and peculiar kind of skin
hatred—racism. It was a hatred that became the very reason why they had
finally gotten up the collective courage, in those very tumultuous 1960s, to
fight for freedom and equality.

Yes, in that unending sadness Bobby Kennedy felt upon the death of his
brother, in that deep depression that shrouded him with loneliness and fear
and hesitation we know now that he understood, in his bones, that he had to
emerge a different man, a changed man, a man of the people. And when
Bobby showed up in public again for the first time, in the late summer of 1964
at the Democratic National Convention in Atlantic City, New Jersey, there was
a thunderous and sustained standing ovation for him—for who he was, for
what the country had lost. Bobby looked scared, overwhelmed,
uncomfortable, and I would read that behind that big podium he was shaking
as he spoke. He had been the one behind the scenes, the operator, the
manipulator, and now here he stood, himself, naked before the world,
vulnerable, unsure of who he was, of what to do next.
And I still cannot recall when I was told that I should pay attention to the life
and times of Bobby Kennedy, but I do know it came in spurts. Somewhere
around the mid-1990s I began making speeches across America, and globally,
too—and found myself looking for inspiration from other speakers. One of the
first speeches of Bobby Kennedy’s that I checked out was his famous one the
night Dr. King was killed. Bobby was in Indianapolis on April 4, 1968, by this
time a United States Senator from New York, and an initially reluctant
presidential candidate. He had been warned that black folks in Indy were
going to rebel, that things could become violent and explode, as they would in
other American cities because of Martin Luther King’s murder. But RFK
ignored the warnings, the fear-mongers. Here are some of his words from that
night:

For those of you who are black and are tempted to be filled with hatred and
distrust at the injustice of such an act, against all white people, I can only say
that I feel in my own heart the same kind of feeling. I had a member of my
family killed, but he was killed by a white man. But we have to make an effort
in the United States, we have to make an effort to understand, to go beyond
these rather difficult times…

What we need in the United States is not division; what we need in the United
States is not hatred; what we need in the United States is not violence or
lawlessness; but love and wisdom, and compassion toward one another, and a
feeling of justice toward those who still suffer within our country, whether
they be white or they be black.

The vast majority of white people and the vast majority of black people in this
country want to live together, want to improve the quality of our life, and want
justice for all human beings who abide in our land.

“Let us dedicate ourselves to what the Greeks wrote so many years ago: to
tame the savageness of man and make gentle the life of this world.

I do not know if I first watched that speech or listened to just the audio, or
merely read it. What I do recall is that after I got through it I was stranded
there in tears at his words. This privileged, wealthy white man had
transformed himself from the bad Bobby to the good Bobby in less than five
years, and he had become the one white man in America—in spite of its long
history of racism—who could speak, with equal eloquence and equal
compassion, to whites, blacks, Latinos, Native Americans, Asians, to any
people anywhere. He had done it with sheer honesty, he had done it with
grace, with dignity; and Bobby had found the compassion, the empathy, that
had been missing. In the pain of mourning his brother’s death, it seems, he
had resurrected his own humanity. He not only knew what it was to suffer, but
he understood, at long last, what others felt who were suffering too.
So, I cried because his words about Dr. King, about America, about the need
for compassion and understanding and love, utterly blew my mind. I cried
because I learned that Indianapolis was one of the few major American cities
that did not spiral into chaos, torching buildings and streets on the night MLK
was shot and killed. I cried because this would be the only time Bobby would
ever mention in public the assassination of his brother. I cried because that
speech, one I have watched and listened to and read countless times since, so
touched my spirit, that I instantly fell in love with who this man was, who he
had become, just as I had done with Malcolm X when I first read his
autobiography as an 18-year-old college kid years before. I am one of the
many boys in America who never had a father so I, we, search for manhood
from many angles, search for fathers and father figures and mentors and, yes,
heroes, wherever we can find them.

So, as I did with Malcolm, and Dr. King, too, I found myself digging for more.
More Bobby speeches. More Bobby photos. More Bobby videos. More Bobby
interviews. I was so transfixed by this man to the point that I found myself
memorizing and quoting his words the way Bobby would memorize and quote
one poet or philosopher or another. I found myself tracing his life steps—the
good, the bad, the ugly, the genius, the many contradictions—so that I could
learn something of myself as a human being, as a man, as someone who had
also committed my life to serving and helping others. I had to know Bobby,
had to study him, had to know about his wife Ethel, their 11 children. I had to
understand that John F. Kennedy’s death caused Bobby to be born, again, as a
freedom fighter, as a fearless champion for the underrepresented. I saw that
Bobby learned, through the tragedy of his brother’s death, that privilege
meant nothing if it was not used to empower others, to highlight oppression,
inequality, if it were not used to help the powerless become powerful, too.

I found myself buying Bobby Kennedy posters and magazine covers in the late
1990s and into the 2000s and framing them for my apartment walls. I found
myself seeking out people who knew him, who had worked with him, or had
worked on his 1968 presidential campaign. I found myself studying what
happened to his children: the stunning successes, the twisted acts of fate that
seem to encircle this very American family generation to generation. I found
myself using words that Bobby used, thinking ideas Bobby thought, of being a
bridge-builder, as he attempted to be in the last four years of his life. I found
myself looking up people who were Bobby’s allies, the folks in Brooklyn, New
York where he helped to establish the Bedford-Stuyvesant Restoration
Corporation, and the folks in California who were farmers, with names like
Dolores Huertes and Cesar Chavez.

I found myself tracing Bobby’s limited time as a leader, from that 1964
Democratic National Convention, to his race for the Senate in New York state,
to his winning that seat, to him climbing a mountain in honor of his slain
brother, to his bold speech about white supremacy in South Africa, to him
visiting the Mississippi Delta and Appalachia to shine a huge light on poverty
in the U.S. I found myself enthralled as Bobby came to oppose the very
Vietnam War his brother helped to escalate—as he, Bobby, supported that
escalation. And I found myself wondering if Bobby knew he too would have a
short life, if he cared or not, if he were afraid or not, and if fear had
something to do with him hesitating to declare himself a candidate for
president, knowing he might not make it to the White House.
And I felt, always, a heavy sadness about Bobby as I studied him closely in
those final chapters of his journey. Perhaps this especially explains his
embrace of black America, how our pain became his pain, how our struggle
became his struggle. Because aside from Native Americans no other people in
this land have known the blues like us, have sung the blues like us, have been
hated on like us. I saw in Bobby, this dead white man, the kind of true ally to
black people, to people of color, to any disempowered group, who was so
badly needed. Bobby knew that the casual racism of the average white
American would dismiss the legitimate cries from people dark like me. So as
the true ally he became took up the mantle of leadership in its purest form: be
selfless, be bold, be creative, build and leave something that will survive you
and touch generations not yet born.

I think if there are two singular events that capture the essence of my feelings
for Bobby Kennedy they are these: In 2012, I got invited to a private film
screening with my great friend Michael Cohen, a Jewish brother who, as a
teenager, had worked on RFK’s 1968 presidential campaign. Mike would tell
me often that he could never bring himself to work on another political
campaign again—until I ran for Congress in Brooklyn in 2008 and 2010. Now
that I think about it, I am sure some of the information I have received
through the years about Bobby has undoubtedly come from Michael. Like me,
he sees in Bobby both human greatness and human frailties, and a man, a
being, completely unafraid to show either by the end of his life.

The movie we went to see was Ethel , about Bobby’s long-widowed and still-
living wife. A captivating and beautiful portrait of the woman who stood with
and next to Bobby through it all, and who was there with him that sad June
day in 1968 when he too was assassinated. After the film was over we got to
meet two of Ethel’s and Bobby’s children, their daughters Kerry and Rory. It
was Rory who made the film, who had gotten her mother to talk, on camera, in
a way she had never done before. I thanked Rory for doing it, for honoring her
mother, for honoring her father. I do not remember her reaction completely,
but I do remember the humility, and how much Rory looked like her father.
The youngest of the 11 children, Rory is the one who was in her mother’s belly
when her dad was killed. She would be born six months after her father’s
death.

The other scene that remains with me about Bobby took place at the Oakland
Museum in the Bay Area of California just a couple of years back. It was during
an exhibit called “1968,” which rightfully piqued my interest as America was
approaching the 50 anniversary of arguably the most explosive year in its
history. I was rightfully intrigued too, as a lover of history, as someone who is
always looking to learn new and different things about that entire decade.
There were television shows and television commercials. There were the
fashions and words and catchphrases of the day. There were tidbits about the
music of 1968 and the entirety of pop culture of that year. Of course, there
was much about the unrest and activism of 1968. And there was the section
on Dr. King and his assassination, which drew a deep sigh from me the longer
I stood there gazing at the images of him, of how his life was ended.
But it was when I made my way to the tribute for Bobby Kennedy, who had
spoken so movingly on the night of King’s death, that I lost it entirely. A
rainbow coalition of us stood around the Bobby portion of the “1968” exhibit
and fixed our eyes on the video of the day RFK’s casket was aboard a
purposely snail-like train that carried his body from New York City down to its
final resting place next to his brother John at Arlington National Cemetery. I
looked around me and I saw people of all races and cultures, all gender
identities, all ages, some old enough to have remembered when Bobby had
died, some like me mere babies in 1968, and quite a few millennials, or
younger, even. There was total silence as we absorbed the video of an equally
rainbow coalition of Americans, locked into that mind-jarring moment in 1968,
as they stood on the side of the railroad tracks staring, pointing, crying,
clutching each other, waving American flags—whatever they could do to let
Bobby Kennedy know what he had meant to them, or how they felt about his
fate, the same fate that had swallowed his brother, and Dr. King just two
months before.

I cried in that moment for a man I had never seen in person, for a man I had
no memory of as a child, whose history I did not encounter until I was well
into my adult life. I thought about Bobby’s last speech there in that ballroom
of the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, after he had won the California
Democratic Primary, and was seemingly on his way to winning this party’s
nomination to be president of the United States. I thought about what it must
have felt like to leave the podium of that packed ballroom to cheers, to be
rerouted, at the last minute, in a different direction, and without proper
security, through the kitchen area, to shake the hand of the young Latino male
who had met him at another time at that hotel while delivering room service,
and who simply wanted to shake Bobby’s hand once more as a thank you for
recognizing his humanity. And how Bobby was gunned down in that moment,
he and others, in that kitchen area. And how that young Latino man placed
religious beads in one of Bobby’s hands, then held Bobby’s head tenderly as
he struggled for sight and breath and life; yet his eyes betrayed that struggle,
knowing it was over. Yes, we cried at that Oakland Museum, friends, families,
strangers, as we watched that train carry a fallen hero to his final resting
place.

I do not like to speculate and think about what ifs with anyone. What if she or
he had lived, what if she or he had not been killed. I just think that Bobby was
who he was for the time he was here, and his life, what he left us, is a great
testimony to the power of personal transformation. I do not know if he ever
got over what happened to his brother. But I do believe that in his brother’s
death Bobby was forced to find his way, to stand as his own man, to be a
leader, finally, in his own right. And little did he know, as he was talking about
poverty in America in that time, that fatherless poor children like me would
grow up to discover him anew, to study him from multiple angles, to see in his
words and his deeds the possibilities for a very different kind of America,
where all would be equal, could be equal, could have opportunities, could be
anything they wanted to be.
This is how I prefer to remember and honor Bobby Kennedy in this 50
anniversary year of his sad and tragic death. That his life was not in vain, that
some can choose to only highlight fragments of his life—if that even. But you
cannot suppress or ignore a king of a human being who, flaws and all, made a
conscious decision to turn his own personal trauma and pain into power and
possibilities for others.

Kevin Powell, activist, writer, public speaker, is the author of 13 books,


including his critically-acclaimed autobiography, The Education of Kevin
Powell: A Boy’s Journey into Manhood . His 14 book will be a biography of
Tupac Shakur. You can follow him on twitter, @kevin_powell, or email
him, kevin@kevinpowell.net.

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