The Pitt News
The independent student newspaper of the University of Pittsburgh | PIttnews.com | September 22, 2016 | Volume 107 | Issue 31
Michael Brown Sr. honors son at Pitt Alyssa Bessasparis For The Pitt News
Before he said a single word about his son, Michael Brown’s father asked his audience to close their eyes. Imagine tragically losing a loved one, he said. “How you just felt,” Michael Brown Sr. said. “That is how I feel every day.” Standing before an audience of more than 400 people, Brown Sr. wore a T-shirt printed with his son’s name and birthdate. On Wednesday, his son would have been 20 years old. Just two years after losing his son to a police officer’s bullet, Brown Sr. shared his story of loss and his hope for change with Pitt students — many of whom are the age Michael Brown was when he was killed. The Pitt Program Council hosted Brown Sr., who honored his son’s legacy and encouraged people of all races to come together, against violence, to understand one another. The event drew more than 400 students, as well as John Fetterman, the mayor of Braddock. According to his father, Brown was an average teenage boy. He was interested in music, the latest phones and playing pranks on his parents. But on Aug. 9, 2014, his son would catapult from an average teenager to being the spark of a national dialogue about race and police brutality. The day of his son’s death, Brown Sr. said he left work at 11:30 a.m. after a call from Brown’s grandmother saying, “Mike is in the street, dead.” Brown Sr. said by the time he got to his
son, he was covered in a white sheet, where he remained, burning in the 98 degree heat for four-and-a-half hours. Brown Sr. said he was never given the opportunity to identify his son’s body. The story of what happened that August day is well known now. Police officer Darren Wilson fatally shot Brown outside a Ferguson, Missouri, apartment complex. He had been accused of stealing from a convenience store. He was unarmed. He was shot 12 times. He was also killed two days before he was set to start classes at Vatterott College. Then, his death sparked national outrage, with protests in Ferguson and around the United States, including on Pitt’s campus. Since Brown’s death, there have been numerous protests in relation to other killings, such as the deaths of Alton Sterling, Philando Castile and Eric Garner. The killings caused media outlets like the Washington Post and The Guardian to start projects to track police shootings and other killings in the United States. Yet after all of the unrest, Brown Sr. said he does not hate police. “I hate the decisions some of them make. It is hard to see who is for you and who is not, but they’re not all bad,” he said. Brown Sr. said police officers need to get back to the days when they knew the names of, and would play with, the children jumping rope and playing basketball in the streets and their parents. Had his son been a different race, Brown Sr. imagines the police may have approached him differently. See Brown on page 3
Michael Borwn Sr. spoke at the William Pitt Union Wednesday night. Meghan Sunners SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER