Friday, January 30, 2015

Recalling the Boys of New Orleans


I was just a little boy, around 10 years old as I recall.  I was a good kid too, always doing what my momma told me to do.  I was with a bunch of other good little Protestant boys from small southern towns attending summer camp in Tennessee and we were having a great time.  At night we would gather around a big campfire under the star-filled skies and hear wonderful stories mingled in with an occasional ghost story to keep us from running away.

        The older boys, who had been to camp before, told us different kinds of stories that were much more frightening than the ghost stories the counselors told.  They told of a group of boys who came to camp every summer from New Orleans.  They were big and mean, bullies in every way.  They terrorized the smaller boys, taking their food, hanging their underwear in the trees, and sometimes teaching them a lesson with their fists that they would never forget.  There were stories of boys who were beaten and tied to a tree, covered with honey to attract the bugs and left for hours.  The legend of the New Orleans boys was growing bigger and more terrifying each and every day.

        I will never forget the sight of the big charter bus pulling up in front of the lodge and watching those big, bad boys getting off and surveying their domain.  All the little fearful Protestant boys who listened to their mommas looked on with fear.  Up to this point camp had been fun and carefree, but now, it was all about survival.  The New Orleans boys were back!

        They staked their claim the first few hours of their arrival.  I watched one crying boy being taken to First Aid with a bloodied nose.  Several others told of the New Orleans boys ransacking their cabins for snacks and tearing up a picture of one boy’s momma and daddy.  I managed to stay out of their way.

        The leader of the New Orleans boys was a tall, lanky boy named Jeff.  Jeff was street smart and talked with a strange accent, punctuating every sentence with a vocabulary that this good Baptist boy had never heard before. Jeff had a group of bodyguards who followed him around doing his dirty work. 

        One day I was walking into the back door of my cabin and Jeff simultaneously walked through the front door.  The cabin was empty and we were all alone.  He stopped and stared at me.  His silent message was loud and clear.  Get out of here little boy, this is my house.   But I didn’t move.  I stood still and stared back.  Finally, with much irritation and anger that I had not trembled in his presence he shouted, “What!” 

        I don’t know what came over me or what made me say what I did.  Jeff was much larger and definitely more intimidating than I could ever be.  I wasn’t a little John Wayne by any stretch of the imagination, but something inside of me caused me to speak and I heard my trembling voice say, “Jeff, you’re not nearly as tough as you think you are.”   

        That was the last thing I remember.  Jeff made quick work of me, leaving me beaten and battered between two footlockers. 

        A few days later I received a box of brownies from home.  Most of the good little Protestant boys got care packages.  The New Orleans boys did not.  My first thought was that I needed to hide these from the bullies, but then I heard another voice speaking to me.

        I found Jeff.  “What do you want?” he demanded, thinking I should have learned my lesson.  “I wanted to share something with you,” I said.   I opened the box of brownies.  His eyes widened and he said, “Those look good.”   “Take one,” I told him.  And he did.  We sat down together and ate the whole box!

        Jeff didn’t become my best friend that day, but he didn’t bother me anymore.  In fact, he would speak to me like we were friends.  And his boys stopped terrorizing my friends.  The voice that I heard that day was a Bible verse that I had learned in Sunday School.  “Love your enemies.  If someone strikes you on the cheek, turn the other cheek.”  

        I took Jesus at his word and discovered that he knows what he is talking about.

 

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