<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
9402160354
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
941228
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Wednesday, December 28, 1994
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1C
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>
Photo Color PATRICIA BECK
</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>


:
(PATRICIA  BECK/Detroit Free Press)
Jemale Jackson, now confined to a wheelchair, always liked
sports.
'I played baseball and got a trophy once in basketball,' he
says. That's him, below, a few years back.
Patricia  Jackson sits with her son Jemale in their northeast
Detroit home. 'All I want to do is move to someplace safe,' she
says.
</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>

</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1994, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
FOOTBALL PLAYER STRUCK DOWN BY RANDOM BULLET
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
The porch light is off. His mother says if you turn it on, "It just gives
them something to shoot at." Same goes for the lamp in the den, which can be
seen from the street. Off. They sit here --  on an old couch, in front of bare
walls and a TV set -- in semi-darkness. Hiding in their homes.

  "You'll want to move away from that window," the mother suggests. 

  "How many nights a week do  you hear shooting?" 
  She blinks, as if surprised by the question.
  "Every night. They shoot like it's their job or somethin."
  Every night. We are not in Beirut or Bosnia. We are on Faircrest  Street in
northeast Detroit, where half the houses are burned beyond repair, and the
winter wind brushes the sidewalks with loose trash left by sanitation workers
in a hurry. Nobody stays long in these  parts. No one takes a stroll around
the neighborhood. If you try to live a normal life here, you may not live
long. Every night. Like it's their job.
  Jemale Jackson, age 16, watches his mother, then  glances at the TV. It
flashes without sound. He flicks the channels. A sitcom. A car commercial. A
football game -- he holds there for a moment. Football. There was a time
Jemale saw himself through football. He played at Denby High, played both
ways, left guard, defensive tackle, he dreamed of a scholarship, maybe had a
chance.
  "I played baseball and got a trophy once in basketball," he says  with
teenage assurance, "but football was my life."
  His old life. The one that ended June 22. Now his legs are limp and his
feet don't move and he plays football only when he sleeps. In his dreams,  he
feels the air rush past his face, he feels motion, contact, speed. Once, he
could run so fast. But he made a mistake, he behaved like a normal kid, he
went outside after dark, Bullet Time. And he  just couldn't run fast enough.
Out of nowhere, a gunshot
  "Why did I walk up that block? I ask myself that all the time. I knew it
was past my curfew. But my cousin Mario was over and I didn't want  to be a
sucker or nothing. . . .
  "It was summer. Friday night, just before 11 o'clock. We went to the store,
me, my cousin, some girls, about six of us. We didn't even have any money. So
we didn't  get nothing. We started walking back, and we were halfway home, we
were on Glenwood, when it happened."
  He pauses, shifts his neck. His face is soft and round, and his sweatshirt
sags on his now-thin  body. Jemale Jackson tells his story with the deadened
tone of a prisoner already tortured. What can they do to him now? He assigns
no blame. He does not cry. You asked, he tells.
  "One guy in our  group, Phil, he stopped to talk to these girls. We yelled
'Come on, Phil.' Then we heard a gunshot, and nobody even looked, we just
started running. Then I heard another shot. I tried to run, but I felt  funny,
and then I fell down on my face. My forehead hit the street."
  Jackson had just become one of 277 kids under age 16 to be shot in Detroit
this year. Thirty-three are dead. The others, like  Jemale, are left alive to
wonder why.
  The bullet, a .25 caliber, entered his back below his neck and lodged in
his chest. No reason. No motive. The shooters -- believed to be a local gang
that wore  red scarves -- scattered quickly.
  Jackson never saw them.
  "When I went to move, I couldn't. . . . Then this kid, he came riding up on
his bike. He saw what happened, and he rode away to get my  stepfather."
  And you?
  "I just lay there."
  People watched from windows. People watched from porches. Peeping eyes,
awaiting the next round of horror. Jemale Jackson, a decent kid who was going
to high school and wanted to go to college and whose big, tragic mistake was
going to get some snacks at the store, lay paralyzed on Glenwood Street, in
his Florida Panthers jersey and black denim shorts.  
  The future of this city nailed to the street.
Word got around who did it
  The police never spoke to Patricia Jackson, Jemale's mother, or Robert
Schell, his stepfather. Although there was a squad car at the site when the
ambulance took Jemale away, no officers came to St. John hospital or
Children's Hospital, where Jemale stayed for nearly two months. Eventually,
Patricia, who was working  two jobs to try and make ends meet, had to go to
the 9th Precinct herself. She told them the story.
  "It took about an hour," she says. 
  She has heard nothing since.
  "As far as we know, there  is not even an investigation into this," Schell
says. He shakes his head. Who is he supposed to see? He works in a paint store
in Sterling Heights, has been a father to Jemale since the kid was 7 years
old. Jemale's natural father was never around. Spent a lot of time in jail. He
is dead now. All Patricia knows is that "he died of natural causes." 
  He was 29.
  Natural causes?
  "That's what  I was told," she says.
  If you find this incredible, you are lucky to live where you do. The truth
is, young black men go down at an horrific rate in this city. There is not
always a good explanation.
  There is rarely justice.
  So when Jemale, the ex-football player, came home from the hospital,
paralyzed from his chest down, needing help to do even the simplest things --
he had to wear a diaper,  be bathed, have his limbs worked -- he also had to
suffer this indignity: to see his assailant, walking around, free as the
breeze.
  "Word got back around who did it, who shot me," Jemale says. "It  was this
guy, real dark skin, he's like one year older than me. He's in one the gangs,
maybe PPG, Pimps Players and Gangsters, or PDQ, Put 'em Down Quick, or CSC,
Corner Street Crips.
  "Anyhow, I  seen him one day, by my street. I was in my wheelchair on the
porch, and I saw him. My uncle was over, and he saw him too."
  Did he look at you?
  "Yeah, he looked at me, and then he got in his  van real quick and left."
  What did you feel?
  "Me? I wanted to shoot him. See how he liked it."
  His eyes go thin and steely, for a moment he really means it, then he
loosens and sighs. He  is still not that cruel. He has never fired a gun. He
has never been in a gang. He has been shot and he has seen others shot, and he
once witnessed a man executed right across the street. Shot at close  range,
in the head, by two men who then ran away.
  After all this, Jemale Jackson says, "Guns are stupid."
  And he's the one with a bullet in his chest.
Keeping the faith
  "All I want to  do is move to someplace safe. Someplace where there's no
shooting on your block or the next block over. That's all. That's good enough.
Just two safe blocks."
  Patricia Jackson exhales. "As soon  as I can make the money, I want us to
get out of here to a place like that."
  She sits down next to her son, adjusts his Michigan cap. She works for the
board of education but can only get part-time hours. She has held second jobs
as a nurse's aide, a cashier, a cook. Maybe, between her and Robert, they make
$20,000 in a good year. Patricia was once beaten by a man with a gun -- there
is almost  no one in this neighborhood without a story -- and she refuses to
have a weapon in the house. She had taught this to Jemale and was proud he had
learned it. Just as she was proud of his football and  proud of his dream to
attend Southern University one day. She remembers -- on the day he was shot --
his report card arrived in the mail. One A, two B's, three C's. 
  He'd been promoted to the 11th  grade.
  The next time she saw him, he was lying in the hospital.
  "The only thing that helps me keep my faith is that Jemale is still here
with me. He didn't die. He's still alive. A lot of mothers  around here don't
have that."
  She slides a little closer to Jemale.
  "At least he wasn't killed."
  You want to scream.
No answer to the big question
  In Congress they debate a crime bill.  In newspapers and on radio they
debate "how to tackle the issue." Meanwhile, inside the decaying white frame
house on Faircrest, Jemale Jackson squints to make out a brochure for a new
wheelchair. He  is due to get one sometime soon, hopefully before the money
runs out. With improved movement in his arms and neck, he is planning to
return to a new high school next month -- most likely Osborn, one  of the
Detroit schools equipped with facilities for the physically disabled.
  Still, there will be no sports. And none of the old dancing around. Jemale,
once a popular, jovial teen, does not seem excited to leave his lonely routine
of video games and TV.
  "Are you worried people will look at you like 'the kid in the wheelchair?"
he is asked.
  He shrugs, then looks at his mother, who is  nodding sadly, and he nods,
too.
  Did you know that throughout this ordeal, Jemale Jackson cried just once?
He did not cry when he was shot. He did not cry in the ambulance, nor at the
hospital, nor  when they poked him with tubes, or bathed him with a sponge, or
wiped him like an infant. He did not cry then.
  But when his mother came one day and he asked her, "Why did I get shot?"
and she said  no one knew, and the police, well, the police wouldn't do
anything, Jemale thought to himself, "That's it. They threw my file away."
  And he burst into tears.
  He cried when he felt he didn't count.
  The truth is they all count, every kid like Jemale, every last one of those
277 with a bullet wound and a story. They are the soil of our city. We have no
future if they keep dying. How many more?  This is only a few miles from all
of us.
  There's a story this week about a new bullet that is so destructive, it
rips through bulletproof vests and tears a hole in your body the size of a
baseball.  Some guy invented this for "the protection of our citizens." These
maniacs, with their logic of more guns, more bullets. And for every one person
who actually stops violence with a trigger, there are  a hundred kids going
down face-first. This is where we're headed, folks, right here, lights out on
Faircrest Street, our own wild west, where Patricia Jackson says, "I'm at the
point where I don't even  jump when I hear a gunshot. We're so used to it, we
expect it to happen."
  Jemale misses this. He is still on the brochure of the Action-Pro
Wheelchair. He studies the wheels, the shape of the seat.
  "It's gonna be lighter," he says. "So I'm gonna be able to move faster,
right?"
  He stops on this word "faster," perhaps realizing it doesn't mean what it
used to. He puts down the brochure, turns up the TV, and his mother and
stepfather find a safe place to sit, away from the window, in case someone
else wants target practice tonight. Lights out on Faircrest Street. How many
more? How many more?
</BODY>
<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
JEMALE JACKSON; HANDGUN; SHOOTING; VICTEM; HIGH SCHOOL
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
