The Fayette Citizen-Opinion Page

Friday, December 29, 2000
Slain DeKalb sheriff-elect was an inspiration for all, regardless of race

By DAVID EPPS
Pastor

A few days ago, Sheriff-elect Derwin Brown was laid to rest. By now, nearly everyone who reads or watches television is cognizant of the fact that Brown was murdered, execution-style, in the driveway of his DeKalb County home. The newly elected sheriff was scheduled to be sworn in as the new sheriff of DeKalb County after a bitterly fought campaign. Brown was, by all accounts, an honorable and hardworking man and a consummate law enforcement professional.

Brown held dual bachelor's degrees, was a graduate of the National F.B.I. Academy, was cofounder of the Father's Foundation (a community-based organization working with troubled youth) and was the father of five and the grandfather of five more. He and his wife Phyllis had been married twenty-three years at the time of his murder. Sheriff-elect Brown had been in law enforcement for twenty-two years.

On November 4, my wife and I were the guests of a couple who sponsored a table at the Fayette NAACP Freedom Fund 2000 event. Sheriff-elect Brown was the keynote speaker. The theme of the evening was "Truth," and Brown certainly shared some hard truths with the hundreds gathered.

Saying that, "Before things get better, the truth must be revealed." He then waded in waist deep, firing volleys that made some of the gathered obviously uncomfortable. Others, however, cheered Brown, and the "Amen's" offered were more than a few.

Brown reminded the gathered leaders that more blacks are currently in jail than in college. Rather than seeking to lay the blame at another's doorstep, Brown stated, "Too many times we blame someone else for our own problem."

"We don't look back and see who made the sacrifices," Brown continued. Brown took dead aim at the music currently in vogue among black youth, saying that the music of the young black culture "degrades women, promotes death, glorifies and encourages killing, and stresses money."

Brown said that if people doubt that music impacts culture then all they have to do is look at how much money is spent on Super Bowl commercials in an attempt to influence buying decisions.

Brown said that a "serious problem" exists in the black community when blacks can call each other the "N-word" and this conduct is seen as normal. If a white person were to use this word, Brown related, the response from blacks would be swift.

Blacks are willing to confront and fight when whites uses the "N-word" to degrade blacks. However, he went on to say that, by using this word to refer to each other, blacks demean each other far more than a racist ever could.

The Sheriff-elect also decried the practice among many blacks of tolerating unacceptable behavior in black elected officials. "Black leaders who are not accountable lower the standards, morality, honesty, and ethics of us all," he declared. "We cannot blame others for our misdeeds," Brown said. Speaking softly, Brown shared, "I was raised to seek excellence but we have lost contact with the things that have served us so well. Black students are setting their standards too low and are giving up the fight but they are only doing what they have been taught." He related that, when he was growing up, he was taught that he would have to work twice as hard to be though half as good as a white man. He was taught, he said, to settle for nothing less that the very best in himself and in others. Brown reminded the older people present of how they had been brought up, too. He called for a return to those strong values of family, morality, and hard work, once prevalent in the black community.

Afterwards, I was able to meet Derwin Brown and felt that I was in the presence of potential greatness. If ever, I mused, there was a contemporary black leader who had a vision of what could be and one who insisted on excellence, regardless of background or color, Derwin Brown was that man. His, I thought, is a voice that needs to be heard and heeded.

Then, one terrible night, that voice was silenced, as Brown was brutally gunned down in his own driveway. Although I only met the Sheriff once, I was devastated when I saw the newscasts.

Brown was much more than a law enforcement officer. He was a positive role model, and a genuine inspiration, for all citizens, regardless of their race. I can only pray that his dreams, his influence, and his voice will not be silenced by evil men.

[Father David Epps is Rector of Christ the King Church. He may be contacted at FatherDavidEpps@aol.com. or at www.ChristTheKingCEC.com.]


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