Hi, Cornelius
I had been writing a newspaper
column for almost 20 years. As part of my work I had seen some of the darkest
and unhappiest aspects of human nature, and I had written about them. It
was beginning to get to me.
There were nights when I would
go home from work and question the very nature of humanity, and wonder
if there was any answer to the remitting cruelty I was observing and writing
about so often. Part of this had to do with a particular case I had been
covering. The case involved one of the worst crimes I had ever encountered.
A beautiful, bright-eyed, four-year-old
boy name Lattie McGee had been systematically tortured over the course
of a long Chicago summer.He had been beaten, he had been starved, he had
been hanged upside down in a locked and darkened closet for nights on end.
All that summer his life dwindled
agonizingly away in that closet, and no one knew he was there; no one heard
his muffled cries. After his death, when the police discovered what had
been done to him, I wrote column after column about the people who had
murdered him. So many cases of impoverished children from forgotten neighborhoods
get lost in the court system. I wanted to make sure that Lattie McGee received
justice, or
something close to it.
With all the public interest in
Lattie because of the columns, the story of his brother, whose name was
Cornelius Abraham, did not receive as much attention. The same things that
were done to Lattie were done to Cornelius, too. Somehow he survived. He
watched his brother slowly being killed and was unable to stop the killers.
Cornelius' brave testimony in court is what helped to convict them.
By the end of the trial Cornelius
had just turned nine. He was a thin, extremely quiet boy; with his little
brother dead and his mother and her boyfriend in prison, he was living
with other relatives. The two great loves of his life were reading
and basketball.
In one of the columns I had written
about Lattie, I had mentioned Cornelius' passion for basketball. Steve
Schanwald, a vice president of the Chicago Bulls, had read the column
and left a message at my office. Though tickets to Bulls' games were without
exception sold out, Schanwald said that if Cornelius would like to come
to a game he would be sure there were tickets available. Jim Bigoness,
the Cook County assistant state's attorney who had delicately prepared
Cornelius' testimony for the trial, and I took him to the game.
To every Chicago youngster who
follows basketball, the stadium was a shrine. Think of where Cornelius
once was, locked up and tormented and hurt. And now he was in the
stadium, about to see his first Bulls game.
We walked down a stairway, until
we were in a lower-level hallway. Cornelius stood between us. Then a door
opened and a man came out. Cornelius looked up, and his eyes filled with
a combination of wonder and awe and total disbelief.
Cornelius tried to say something;
his mouth was moving but no words would come out. He tried to speak and
then the man helped out by speaking first.
"Hi, Cornelius," the man said.
"I'm Michael Jordan."
Jordan knelt down and spoke quietly
with Cornelius. He made some jokes and told some stories about basketball
and he didn't rush. You have to understand - for a long time the only adults
Cornelius had any contact with were adults who wanted to hurt and
humiliate him. And now Michael Jordan was saying, "Are you going
to cheer for us today? We're going to need it."
Jordan went back into the locker
room to finish dressing for the game. Bigoness and I walked Cornelius back
upstairs to the court. There was one more surprise waiting.
Cornelius was given a red shirt
of the kind worn by the Bulls' ball boys. He retrieved balls for the players
from both teams as they warmed up.
Then, as the game was about to
begin, he was led to Jordan's seat on the Bulls' bench. That's where he
was going to sit - right next to Jordan's seat. During the minutes of the
game when Jordan was out and resting, Cornelius would be sitting with him;
when Jordan was on the court, Cornelius would be saving his seat for him.
At one point late in
the game Jordan took a pass and sailed into the air and slammed
home a basket. And there, just a few feet away, was Cornelius Abraham,
laughing out loud with joy.
I wanted to thank Jordan for taking
the time to be so nice to Cornelius. The meeting between them, I
had learned, had been something that Jordan had volunteered for;
he had been aware of the Lattie McGee case, and when he had heard
that the Bulls were giving Cornelius tickets to the game, he had
let it be known that he was available.
After the game, in the locker
room after the last sportswriter left, Jordan got up to retrieve
his gym bag and head for home. As he walked toward the door of the
locker room he saw me and stopped, and I said, "I just wanted to
tell you how much Cornelius appreciated what you did for him."
For a second I had the strange
but undeniable impression that perhaps this was a man who didn't get thanked
all that often - or at least that there were so many people endlessly lining
up to beseech him for one thing or another that all he was accustomed to
was the long file of faces in front of him wanting an autograph, a favour,
a moment of his time, faces that would immediately be replaced by more
faces with more entreaties.
He stood there waiting, as if he was so used to ceaselessly being asked
for
things that he thought my thanks on Cornelius' behalf might be
the inevitable preface to petitioning him for something else.
When I didn't say anything, he
said, "That's why you came back down here?"
"Well I don't think you know how
much today meant to Cornelius," I said.
"No, I'm just surprised that you
came back down to tell me," he said.
"My mom would kill me if I didn't,"
I said, smiling.
"She tried to raise me right."
He smiled back, "Mine, too," he
said.
We shook hands and I turned to
leave and I heard him say,
"Do you come out to a lot of games?"
"First one," I said.
"Well, you ought to come back,"
he said.
By Bob Greene
from A 4th Course of Chicken Soup
for the Soul
Copyright 1997 by Jack Canfield,
Mark Victor Hansen,
Hanoch McCarty & Meladee McCarty