From Company Man: My Jesuit Life, 1950-1968:
In the first class meeting for one of my sections (on Religion/social problems), after I announced that we’d be reading Crisis in Black and White and talking about race, one of the students, Bill Daley, the mayor’s youngest son, came up and asked where I’d grown up. I said “in the Austin & Madison area.”
I didn’t say Oak Park, which would have been only half right anyway, because Chicago’s Austin area was part of our neighborhood, but neither did I want to locate myself in suburbia. He had read the book that summer, I learned later. So had his mother, or at least she knew about its part that told of their Bridgeport neighborhood rising to expel blacks who unwisely moved in there.
The book was “nothing but newspaper stories,” she told the principal later in one of her irate phone calls that gave him stomach aches in the coming weeks. “Are they?” he asked me. I told him no, but even then, years before I had joined the newspaper business, I saw no condemnation in that if it were true. I trusted newspapers.
Running out of things to say to my restless students, I got a small budget for speakers. One of them, a black guy from the Mayor’s office, was given a hard time by students. Bill Daley, defensive, complained to me in a written report on the session for not interfering. I wrote back in essence that it had been a judgment call, that generally I tried not to interfere with discussion.
Another speaker, a young black guy experienced in teaching Catholic high school boys, was far better at engaging the students. He sent me out of the classroom for his talk, which ended with Bill and him yelling at each other, I heard from other students. The guy was dynamic and knew what he was doing, however. Months later, when I had him back for another appearance, I saw him and Bill talking after class in friendly fashion.
But the guy apparently used “hell” or “damn” or both in my classroom, and that gave Mrs. D. her opening for yet another stomach-churning complaint to the principal. The rector, Bob Koch, who was very patient with me amid all this, told me about her complaints, but never with so much as an admonition.
A MAYORAL CONFERENCE Mid-term came around, and time for parent-teacher conferences. Bob Koch asked if I’d be willing to meet the mayor separately. The mayor and Mrs. had waited their turn in previous years for such conferences (for an older brother), but this time the discussion was expected to get tense, and so privacy was in order. I said fine.
There was an element here of not bucking City Hall, what with the school being in an urban renewal area where land was being given or sold cheap to worthy institutions. What’s more, the school was somewhat on the bubble financially, or very much on the bubble—I was not on the inside of such matters—and I felt responsible. So I called up City Hall and left my name and number.
That night the Mrs. called from the Bridgeport home. I said that with the mayor being so busy and all, maybe he and she could come (with Bill) to their conference at some time of their choosing. “Just a minute,” she said, then came back on. “We’ll be there in fifteen minutes,” she said.
I greeted the three, plus driver, who waited outside the parlor, at the Roosevelt Road front door. We went into the nearby parlor, across from the elevator. For the next half hour, the city might have been sliding into Lake Michigan, for all the mayor seemed to care. I had his whole attention, and needless to say, he had mine.
I opened with “I think I know why you’re upset,” but the Daleys were having none of it. “You’re the one who called the meeting!” said Richard J. Oh. No niceties here: these parents were pissed, I was the enemy of the hour.
Bill had done poorly in some tests, I told them. “What tests?” asked the mayor. Oh. It was challenge time. I excused myself and took the elevator up to my 4th-floor garret, retrieved the tests, and brought them down and showed them.
One was about the California labor organizer Cesar Chavez and the braceros, from an article in America magazine. Both were standard reference points in the circles I was reading in and touch points in a social problems/religion course.
“What’s a bracero?” the mayor asked. I told him—a migrant worker in California. Not good enough. He spoke in flat tones, only his mouth moving. None of my explanations satisfied him as we went through other subject matter of the course. He was out to discredit me, I realized, before the son, who sat saying nothing. It was standard for the son to accompany parents to conferences.
I don’t recall being surprised to see him—this in contrast to the dozens, I am tempted to say hundreds, of teacher conferences my wife and I attended for our six kids over 27 years in grade, junior high, and high school, when the son or daughter did not come along.
Neither did Mrs. Daley say anything. She certainly was not embarrassed, as my mother would have been if my father were pressing an issue with some heat. She was wholly in his corner. The mayor spoke for both. He had one substantive objection. “What does this have to do with religion?” He said it was unlike any religion teaching he had ever heard of. I believed him.
So there I was, no good at the half measure and having pretty much decided that social justice was the be-all and end-all of religious practice, and I had the mayor of Chicago challenging the notion.
Not bad, when you get down to it, for witnessing to one’s belief in a high place. Not that I made the most of the opportunity. I had no stomach for an argument and gave the soft answer. At one point my gorge rose and I was about to respond in kind. But this would not have done the school any good. Besides, I was presumably trying to be Christian about it, and so I let the gorge deflate.
The mayor turned to Bill at one point, admonishing him to work hard or something like it. And another time, maybe three-quarters through, he said something construable as compliment, “Well, you believe in what you’re teaching,” he said, conceding to me briefly the courage of my convictions. This remained with me inexplicable in view of how strange it all must have looked to him.
— More to come . . .