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Title: Trotsky, Jesus & Buddha
Author: Ron Tabor
Date: 2003
Language: en
Topics: 1960s, Mental Health, drugs, psychiatry, Trotskyism
Source: Retrieved on 2004-10-17 from https://web.archive.org/web/20041017202243fw_/http://www.utopianmag.com/PDFs/TrotskJesusBuddha.pdf
Notes: Published in The Utopian, Volume 4

Ron Tabor

Trotsky, Jesus & Buddha

It was early October, 1966. I had just returned to the “Windy City” to

begin my second year at the University of Chicago. The previous spring,

I had helped organize and had taken part in an anti-war/anti-draft

sit-in in the school’s administration building that had tied up the

campus for five days and had made the New York Times and national TV. I

was looking forward to getting something like that going again. This

made up for what I expected would be another unspeakable Chicago winter,

as well as the stifling spiritual atmosphere (smug hypocrisy) of the U

of C as an institution.

My roommate to be, Stewart Nathan, and I had heard that a mutual friend,

Pete Braun, had “flipped out” the previous summer, but we hadn’t given

it much thought. A lot of people flipped out back then, and besides,

flipping out meant different things to different people. In any case, we

hadn’t seen Pete yet and we had other tasks to concern us. Stewart had

had both the foresight and the energy to locate an apartment off-campus

and had asked me and another guy to share it with him. (When and how he

found the place I still don’t know.) I had readily agreed and we were

going about fixing it up. It needed fixing.

The apartment was large, with two substantial bedrooms, a big living

room with a kind of alcove off to one side that could serve as someone’s

sleeping area, and a kitchen and adjacent eating area. It was in the

basement of a typical Chicago apartment building and had typical

“basement apartment” features. The windows were small and placed high up

on the walls, so that little light came in. Water pipes for the

apartments above us were exposed, and the apartment suffered from a

certain grunginess. But none of this mattered to us. If anything, it

gave the apartment a romantic, “underground” feel and a degree of

privacy that we appreciated. At least the neighbors wouldn’t see us

get-ting stoned,which we did, rather often.

The place also had two bathrooms, as well as three doors to the outside,

which I at least saw as useful in case the police raided the place. Of

course, later (after we had moved out) when someone was arrested in the

apartment—the police planted marijuana behind the refrigerator—the extra

doors were irrelevant.

As important as these features were, another was crucial.Our new home

was quite a ways from the U of C campus. This meant trekking to classes

in the sub-arctic cold during the winter, but it also put some social

distance between us and what we saw as the white, upper middle-class

enclave that the university represented. We recognized that the entire

area was a mostly white, middle-class island in the otherwise

overwhelming Black South Side, but to us back then, the nuantial

difference between where we lived and the campus mattered a great deal.

We felt more“organic,” closer to the Black community.

Although I was to give up one of the bedrooms to let still another

friend move in (thus condemning myself to sleeping and studying in the

dining area, through which our new roommate tromped at all hours of the

night to make tea), the apartment was great. It was also cheap, what

with four of us sharing the rent, while we lived frugally on rice,ground

beef and scrambled eggs (nobody knew about cholesterol back then).

The preparation of our apartment (mostly, painting it scarlet, dark pink

and an almost lavender blue), was not quite complete and the school term

about to begin when we received a phone call one evening from our

allegedly flipped out friend, Pete. He was in jail downtown, having been

arrested for what he described as “jumping capitalists on Wells Street.”

We didn’t know what this entailed and Pete sounded a bit weird on the

phone, but we figured we’d better go bail him and worry about what kind

of shape he was in afterward. So we called a few friends,rounded up the

necessary cash (I think it was $50), borrowed a car from some young

professor friends who lived across the court, and headed downtown to

rescue Pete from the clutches of the Chicago judicial system.

After we had dealt with the paper work, paid the money and waited a

while, the cops brought up Pete. While he was very glad to see us, our

pleasure at seeing him was tempered by what we noticed as he got closer.

In some ways, Pete looked as he always had: short and wide, almost

square, with shortish brown hair and an Emiliano Zapata mustache on his

attractive face. He was wearing blue jeans, boots and a red and black

lumber jacket, all of which was almost a uniform with him. But his eyes

were different. Brown and normally soft, alert and expressive, they were

now bloodshot and didn’t move around much. Mostly, he just looked

straight ahead, turning his head to look at things.

While Pete’s eyes were suggestive of a change in his mental state, his

behavior was even more so. Under his right arm,perched on his hip, were

ten or so small art books, almost pamphlets, consisting of vivid color

prints of the works of various impressionist and post-impressionist

painters,such as Monet, Renoir, Degas, Toulouse-Lautrec, Van Gogh,

Matisse, Kandinsky, Picasso, etc. “Look at this!” he exclaimed, before

even greeting us, while showing us one of the prints. “Isn’t this

beautiful?” Stewart and I agreed with him, as we looked at each other

worriedly. This process continued as we made our way to the car. Pete,

it was now apparent, had indeed flipped out.

We heard later that the “flipping out” had occurred the previous August,

during a national SDS convention, held somewhere in the Midwest. Pete,

his girlfriend, Kathy, and his best friend, Carl, had “tripped” (taken

LSD) together,during which experience Pete had learned that Carl and

Kathy were sleeping together. While Pete pretended to be successful with

the ladies, he really wasn’t, and the revelation that his best pal,

Carl, had “stolen” his “girl” from him was more than he could bear. His

acid trip never quite ended.

Now permanently high, Pete was in a good mood, chattering away as we

drove back to our apartment, while Stewart and I tried to pretend, at

least to Pete, that nothing was the matter. We had him sit down at the

table in our dining room and gave him something to drink. While Pete sat

there drinking and thinking whatever thoughts he was capable of, I

pretended I needed to go to the bathroom so that I could get out of the

room and exchange a few words with Stewart.

“He’s crazy!” Stewart half whispered, half shouted in my ear. “Talk to

him! Tell him he’s flipped out and should get some help.”

“No, YOU talk to him!” I insisted, although I was already accepting my

fate. Stewart, assuring me that I was better at this kind of thing than

he was, pushed me back into the dining room.

It was very hot in the apartment, and Pete and I had both taken off our

shirts. We sat across from each other over the table, which was placed

against one (pink) wall. I had already started to talk when I noticed

Pete’s well muscled arms and chest and a large kitchen knife that

someone had inadvertently left on the table. With Stewart looking on

from behind Pete (and halfway around the corner), I sat as calmly as I

could and began to tell Pete that Stewart and I thought he had, well,

kind of flipped out and, uh, though the should see someone.

Saying this wasn’t easy, since neither Stewart nor I had much confidence

in psychiatry or psychoanalysis, which we generally considered to be

techniques designed to ensure people’s conformity to the ideology and

behavioral norms of an evil and unjust social system. It also wasn’t

clear what Pete would do when he found out that two more of his friends

had “turned on him,” in this case telling him that they thought he was

crazy and should see a shrink.

At first, Pete was silent. Then, starting slowly and softly and

gradually gaining speed and volume....

(In a Black accent) “You don’t even know who I am, do you, motherfucker?

You don’t even know who I am. Well, I’ll tell you. I was TRAINED in the

streets, motherfucker,TRAINED in the streets. And I can use both hands,

karate,jujitsu, kung fu....”

At this point, Pete stood up and started doing karate chops on the wall

and the table, then picked up the knife and started waving it around.

I was trying desperately to look unperturbed and to avoid doing or

saying anything that might get Pete even more hyped up than he already

was. I was also not letting my eyes move from the knife Pete had taken

such a liking to. But out of the corner I my eye I did notice Stewart,

still watching and listening in on the conversation, crouching a bit

closer to the ground. At bottom, I felt that Pete, who had always been a

kind and gentle person, deeply concerned about the racial and other

injustices of our society (underneath a little bravado), would not

actually do anything violent.

Meanwhile, his tirade was getting more and more bizarre. He was the

reincarnation of Leon Trotsky, Jesus Christ and Buddha. He had formed a

new organization, the Revolutionary Organizing Committee (“That’s right,

Rock, R.O.C!”) that he wanted us to join. He was in direct communication

with Mao and Fidel(apparently, he was on a first name basis with them),

who were infiltrating cadres into the United States through Miami and

San Francisco. When he gave the signal, in a month, the revolution would

start.

Somehow, after Pete had finished, Stewart and I managed to calm him

down. We suggested that perhaps we should continue the discussion

tomorrow; it was late, we all need-ed to get some sleep, etc., etc. We

fixed Pete up with a blanket and a pillow on a couch in the living room

and retreated to our own sleeping areas. As I lay down on my mattress, I

heard Pete talking to himself, and then a click,as Stewart locked his

door.

The next morning, Stewart and I had things to do on campus (register for

classes, buy books, catch up with friends, etc.), and this was as good

an excuse as any not to pursue last night’s conversation with Pete. So

we all walked over to the university and then went our separate ways.

The campus looked pretty, with the sun,already low in the sky, shining

on the gray Gothic-style buildings and the leaves starting to fall, and

I was glad to get away from Pete for awhile and avoid the responsibility

of trying figure out what were going to do with him. Although it was

obvious he needed help, he clearly didn’t want it and I knew we couldn’t

force him to get it. Besides, I was starting to get pissed off at him.

Who the hell needed to get a knife waved in his face and be called a

motherfucker?

After registering, I bumped into Pete posted in front of the campus

coffee shop trying to recruit people for ROC. He wasn’t having much

luck. And he still refused to see a doctor. His flip, arrogant attitude

increased my resentment even more and I basically decided to wash my

hands of the whole situation. We had tried, he didn’t want to get help,

so what more could we do? (And fuck him, anyway.) Right?

I don’t know where he spent the next few nights. Stewart and I hadn’t

kicked him out of our apartment, but we hadn’t gone looking for him

either. When we did run into him on campus, he was still doing his

thing. Along with his other fantasies, he was particularly caught up

with the idea that one of the guys active on the campus left, a big,

good-looking, light-skinned Black fellow named Gerry Kirk, was an

informant for the Chicago Red Squad. We knew, on principle, that the

pigs had agents in the movement, but Gerry didn’t fit the pattern. A

nice guy with a friendly smile, Gerry never had much to say that had any

political substance; he never acted like a leader and he never tried to

incite violence or talked about guns. Mostly, he was just there.

“The guy’s an agent, I’m telling you,”Pete would say, shaking his head.

About a week after we had bailed him out and first heard about ROC,

Stewart and I encountered Pete again.Our consciences getting the better

of us, we tried once more to convince him to see a psychiatrist or

something. To our surprise, Pete agreed, and with Gerry Kirk appearing

from nowhere,we all set out across the campus and across Ellis Avenue to

the university hospital to try to find someone who might be able to help

our friend.

When we finally located the psychiatric department, we asked the first

person we saw if a psychiatrist were avail-able. She said there wasn’t

(it was evening by this time),but there was a psychiatric social worker

on duty who would see us. He wanted to talk to one of us alone before

taking on Pete. I was elected.

Although I didn’t know exactly know what a psychiatric social worker is

or does (I still don’t), I somehow felt the man in the office looked the

part, or was trying hard to do so. He was a pleasant faced, middle-aged

fellow, dark,probably Jewish. He wore greenish pants, a green/brown

tweed sport jacket with leather patches on the elbows over a green

sweater, and comfortable-looking shoes. He also had a longish crew cut,

complete with dandruff, and topped everything off with a pipe. After I

explained that we had a friend who had flipped out during an acid

trip,that we wanted him to get help, etc., the man asked, “Well,what are

his symptoms?”

“Symptoms?” I exclaimed. “He thinks he’s the reincarnation of Trotsky,

Jesus and Buddha. He thinks the revolution is happening next month, when

he gives the signal.”

“Well, bring him in,” the man said.

So Stewart and I brought Pete in, with Gerry trailing along. Puffing on

his pipe, our psychiatric social worker asked Pete some questions, which

Pete answered politely, if somewhat impatiently. Then, during a pause

when the doc-tor stopped to relight his pipe, Pete cut in.

“Wait a minute, wait a minute. I wanna ask YOU a question.”

A bit startled, the psychiatric social worker answered,“Well, all

right.”

Then Pete: “I bet you think the way to bring about social change in this

country is through the Democratic Party.Am I right?”

Even more surprised, the psychiatric social work looked first at

Stewart, then at me, as if checking with us before venturing an answer.

“Why, yes. Yes I do,” he finally replied.

Pete then turned to Stewart and me with a triumphant look on his face,

jabbing his index finger into his chest.“And you think I’M crazy!”

We knew right away the interview was over. Whatever the man’s clinical

abilities, his credibility with Pete was utterly destroyed. Pete knew we

agreed with him on the political point, and we knew we’d be incapable of

convincing him that the man’s political opinions, however questionable

they might be, had no reflection on his professional competence.

Besides, we didn’t really believe this ourselves. In any event, the man,

who had no idea what he had done,told us there was nothing we could do

unless Pete voluntarily committed himself somewhere. So we all left the

hospital, and Stewart and I parted with Pete and Gerry in front of the

university’s administration building.

Stewart and I never saw Pete after that (nor Gerry). Quite awhile later,

I heard (from Carl, as it turned out), that Pete had gotten himself

somewhat together. He had been arrest-ed again, but had accepted a deal

that all charges against him would be dropped (he had never done

anything violent, after all), if he underwent psychiatric treatment. He

had indeed gotten some help and was back attending classes at Roosevelt

University, then a commuter school for working class students in

downtown Chicago. He still looked, talked and acted a bit funny, Carl

said, but at least he wasn’t “jumping capitalists” on Wells Street. He

may well have continued to believe he was the reincarnation of Trotsky,

Jesus and Buddha, but, as we know, the revolution didn’t take place as

scheduled. (Maybe Pete just forgot to give the signal.)

Years later, Stewart and I learned that Pete was right about one thing.

Gerry Kirk was indeed a police informant. In the mid-1970s, he told some

tall tales, including a bunch about Stewart and me (and our parents!),

in testimony before a congressional committee investigating campus

disturbances during the ’60s.