💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › james-herod-bob-mckinney-in-memoriam.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 11:18:32. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: Bob McKinney -- In Memoriam Author: James Herod Date: 2006 Language: en Topics: obituary
Yesterday I attended a memorial gathering for Bob McKinney. He died
November 20, 2006, at the age of 75, from melanoma. His wife Carol had
preceded him in death by several years. The meeting was attended by his
two daughters, Beth and Christine, and their spouses and children, by
his long time work partner Lenore Pereira and her two daughters,
Shanakawa and Teefee, and their three children, and by various friends
and comrades, many of whom knew Bob either through his work as a plumber
or through his work at the Red Book Store, which was housed in the Red
Sun Press building on Green Street in Jamaica Plain, Boston from 1983 to
1994. In attendance, in addition to the above, were Kathy Hoffman, Annie
Hoffman, Tom Keefer, Kevin Murray, Maggie Cohen, Eric Johnson, Nancy
Nichols, James Herod, Betty, Eleanor, and several people I did not know.
There were about twenty of us. We sat around in a circle in a room in
the Democracy Center at 45 Mt. Auburn Street in Cambridge and reminisced
about Bob. It was the first such memorial meeting I had ever attended,
but I thought it was an excellent way to pay tribute to someone's life.
Soon after leaving the meeting however I suddenly realized to my
amazement that no one (including me) had mentioned Bob's politics, the
political philosophy that had guided his life. This was a strange
omission, but sort of understandable. You see, Bob was an anarchist.
Those in attendance didn't really reflect Bob's political orientation,
being either apolitical, Marxist, progressive populist, left-liberal, or
communist. I'm reasonably sure that I was the only anarchist there. This
is why I decided to write up this tribute to him. A man who led such an
exemplary life, who actually practiced day by day the anarchist
principles he believed in, deserves to be remembered and honored as such
by anarchists as well as others. But he probably won't be. He left no
writings. He belonged to no anarchist organizations. He did not
participate in any great anarchist campaigns. He is not known beyond his
small circle of friends in Boston. Hence this remembrance.
Bob McKinney was an absolutely unique personality. Upon that we were all
agreed. I suppose that's why we all came to a gathering in his honor. As
each of us began to talk about our experiences with him some aspects of
that uniqueness began to become clear. He combined in ways you rarely
see traits that usually are not found together in the same person. For
example, he was exceptionally soft-spoken, kind, and gentle, yet this
was combined with a certain moral fierceness. He was a very strong
personality, but yet he was not domineering. He was uncompromising in
his beliefs, yet he was strangely tolerant of those who lived
differently, by different codes. He was a plumber, yet was as well-read
and knowledgeable as any Harvard intellectual. He was a staunch atheist,
yet somehow there was a spiritual tone to him. One friend described him
as almost saint like. Another friend however brought in a picture of Bob
kneeling with his head under a kitchen sink, and commented that Bob
often joked that for an atheist he sure did spend a lot of time on his
knees. Many people who have a keen sense of moral outrage at the
injustices of the world are often confrontational, even pugnacious,
fighting as they are to change the world into a better place. This was
not Bob's way. He was gentle and patient. Lenore said that in all the
years she worked with him she had seen him really angry only once. Among
the revolutionaries, he probably most resembled Kropotkin. In a memorial
meeting like this the natural tendency is to focus on the good points
and pass over the bad points of someone's life, but in Bob's case there
really weren't all that many bad points to have to pass over.
I worked with Bob for five years, from 1987 to 1992, in the Red Book
Store in Jamaica Plain, which was Boston's only independent, radical
bookstore. After finishing his day's work as a plumber he would come
into the store and volunteer a few more hours to help keep it operating.
I saw him several times a week, sometimes almost daily. We never became
friends in the social sense, but we were pretty much on the same page
politically, and worked well together in the store. Indeed, if it hadn't
been for Bob and Lenore I probably wouldn't even have been admitted to
the Red Book Store collective to begin with. There was some resistance.
I was an older man. No one really understood my politics. But Bob and
Lenore fought for me. We ended up on the same side in many of the
political struggles that took place within the project during in the
next five years.
One thing I liked about Bob were his hatreds. What someone hates defines
them as much as what they like. He hated capitalism, the state, and God,
the three traditional anarchist hatreds. But Bob also hated liberals,
reformists, academics, and pretentious middle class "radicals."
Naturally, he wasn't too happy with sectarian Marxists either. He had an
instinctive understanding of the class structure of the country, and
unerringly identified with the poor and oppressed, and opposed the
oppressor. This was just as true for race and gender issues as for
straight class issues. He invariably sided with women and people of
color.
Another thing I liked about him is that no one could intimidate him.
Some Harvard so-called radical intellectual would come into the store
and start pontificating. Bob would just stand there quietly listening,
and then eventually ask a couple of incisive questions and make a
comment or two, and that whole bubble of hot air and jargon would just
burst into thin air. It was a delight to behold.
He hated the gentrification that was then coming into full swing in
Jamaica Plain and did what he could to oppose it. He hated the Community
Development Corporation there, which he regarded as reformist, and an
arm of the state. He hated mainstream American culture, and lived as
much apart from it, off the grid, as anyone could and still function.
Much of the time he didn't pay taxes, he didn't keep his plumbing
license up to date, violated bureaucratic rules by the dozens, was not a
good materialist consumer, and didn't pay any attention to fashions or
contemporary pop culture. His hatred of the state and capitalist culture
was expressed daily by not cooperating with it or participating in it.
Several friends noted what a voracious reader Bob was. He kept abreast
of what was happening in the world, and was reading radical magazines
right up until he died. He read the tough books too. Kevin reported that
he first met Bob when Bob was in Harvard Bookstore buying a copy of
Nicolas Poulantzas, Political Power and Social Class. Bob was a genuine
intellectual, in the sense of someone who studies hard to understand the
world he lives in and then applies that knowledge to his life. But he
had little patience with what passes for intellectualism in the United
States.
Bob's main work though was as a plumber. He was a very skilled
craftsman, who knew his trade backwards and forwards, and knew the
historical backgrounds to the materials and equipment he was using. Many
of the stories about Bob's plumbing work recounted what a talented,
meticulous, careful, and patient worker he was. But here is what was
unique about him. He used his trade to really help people. He worked
mostly on jobs for poor people. He always had time for emergency jobs,
and would refuse to sign on to a long-term job, even if financially
attractive, if it was so rigidly scheduled that he couldn't take time
out for emergencies. He refused to work on large, commercial jobs. If he
and Lenore were absolutely broke they would sometimes take a job with a
more middle class client who could pay, but they did this only under
duress. He spent a lot of time on jobs for various progressive
organizations, who never could pay much. The result was that Bob lived
in poverty most of his life. He was always giving away work, to people
who needed it.
The poverty was exacerbated however by his slowness, even reluctance, to
collect the money that was owed him. Many people commented on this trait
of his, and what a puzzle it was, and what misery it caused him. But
that's just the way he was. Lenore told a typical story. They had spent
two days of very hard work in a freezing basement putting in a new
furnace, so their client would have heat, only to find that when they
finished and went upstairs to collect their check, the client told them
that because of Christmas expenses she wouldn't have the money to pay
them until later. Bob didn't raise a stink about it or get mad, but just
let it slide.
Another story told of how Bob spent an afternoon fixing a broken kitchen
sink. On his way out, the owner mentioned that her oven door wasn't
working. So Bob went back in, took a look at it, and soon was busy
taking the whole thing apart, fixing it, and putting it back together
again, with the result being that he got home several hours later, late
in the evening. He never got paid for either job.
Then there was Tommy. Tommy was different, learning impaired as they now
say. Tommy worked with Bob and Lenore for years. It was only because of
Bob that he was let out of an institution. He went with them everywhere
and helped out as best he could.
Well, there were many other stories told, about his radical
environmentalism, about what a healthy diet he ate, about what a lean
and fit man he was all his life, about what a calming influence he had
been with Lenore's children when they were growing up, about his hatred
of doctors, and about his unusual marriage.
All in all, a most unusual person, who led a most unusual life. Everyone
said they will miss him greatly.
James Herod
December 17, 2006