Traveling to Washington, D.C. for work means taking the
Amtrak Accela train from Penn Station. Penn Station was once a gleaming
monument to New York’s greatness, but decades ago it was leveled, reduced to a
subterranean maze of misery by the powers of commerce without conscience and
New York’s Philistine tradition of tearing down some of its most beautiful
historical landmarks in the name of progress.
Getting ready for the three-hour train ride to Washington
meant stopping by one of the independent delis that still survive there amid
the chain concessions. As I approached I saw a man in a red Guardian Angels
jacket and red beret, and thought it was probably Curtis Sliwa. It was.
Curtis Sliwa was a night manager at a McDonald’s on Fordham
Road in the Bronx when he decided to do something about New York’s Crime
problem. He founded the Guardian Angels,
an unarmed, unformed crime fighting group that started patrolling New York’s
dangerous subways and streets. He didn’t ask permission or get political
approval for what he was doing, he just did it. This was at a time when
landlords were burning down their old buildings because the insurance money was
worth more than the property was valued. The 1970s saw crime explode in every
borough as a bankrupt New York City appealed to the federal government for help
that never came and was forced to lay off police officers.
The Guardian Angels were the vanguard of resistance to the
hopelessness that gripped New York. They didn’t have police approval and
politicians dubbed them “vigilantes;” they didn’t care. The unarmed volunteers
in their trademark red berets were a sign that people still cared about the
city and were willing to put their lives on the line to make a difference.
It was not all straight shooting, though. Sliwa admitted
that some of the early stories he told about Guardian Angel heroism were fabrications.
Still, Sliwa was an anti-crime crusader before it was cool, a strong voice that
cut through the blather of polite talk and gave the criminal class the harsh
language it deserved. Even as New York started to turn around, Sliwa’s crime-fighting
ways led to an attempt to kill him by the Gambino Crime Family.
Sliwa’s career as a broadcaster has almost always paired him
with someone left-of-center to discuss and debate the issues of the day. His
pairing with Ron Kuby on MSNBC was a highlight of the network’s earlier days
before all of cable television spun into hyper-partisan outposts; they later reunited on AM radio.
I said hello and Curtis Sliwa shook my hand and give me his
business card, asking me where I was from. I gave him my business card and told
him I was from where I worked.
“No, where are you from? Born and raised?”
“I’m from the city originally and grew up mostly in
Yonkers.” I didn’t want to give him my last two decades of history being a city
resident, as we were waiting in line at the deli. Our wait was shortly over,
and he bid me farewell.
The politicians who once spurned the Guardian Angels later
embraced them, and they now operate in more than 130 cities in 13 countries. And
Sliwa remains an outspoken personality in New York politics. He’s even vowed to
run for New York City mayor next year.
Similar to Ed Koch, Curtis Sliwa is a personification of New York City and will
always remain one of the defining personalities of our chaotic metropolis. My
encounter with a legit New York City celebrity was brief, but it brightened my
day.
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