A Legacy Met. Rafer Interviews Rafer as Namesake Gains a New Perspective

A Legacy Met. Rafer Interviews Rafer as Namesake Gains a New Perspective

I was named after Rafer Johnson, Olympic decathlon champion, Robert Kennedy supporter of the late 1960’s and Special Olympics co-founder.

While he needs no introduction in Southern California, virtually no one my age had heard of him in the Chicago suburb where I grew up. We all know kids can be cruel and because any unusual first name, I was called a variety of parodies throughout my childhood. 

I didn’t know much about Johnson other than what my parents told me. This was before ESPN Classic. I knew he must be impressive for them to name their son after him when surely they knew it would end up sending me to therapy later on. Mostly though, I just resented mom and dad for playing what seemed like a cruel joke on me.

I had the great fortune of meeting Rafer. I was sent out to interview him regarding his latest of many charities, “Kids in Sports”, a citywide non-profit organization that gives kids who attend schools without after-school sports an opportunity to participate in extracurricular sporting activities. 

But before delving into that, I first needed to know where this “Rafer” name came from.

“When my dad was in the fourth grade one of his best friends was killed,” Johnson said. ‘When my dad went to the funeral, he found out that this kid who everyone called Louis, was actually named Rafer. So, my dad decided in fourth grade, he was going to name his first son Rafer.”

My father, Tim, became familiar with Johnson after his impressive gold-medal finish in the decathlon in the 1960 Olympics. My dad was a sports fan and also very passionate about the civil rights movement of the late ‘60’s. My father played four sports in college, including football, sharing the same backfield with Calvin Hill at Yale. He went on to be a top sportscaster in Chicago from 1976 to 2001 when he died of cancer at 56. He called sports, “the great equalizer”.

“Only in sports were those involved truly color blind,” my father said. 

To my dad, Johnson was the first great U.S. athlete to represent that kind of colorblindness. Jesse Owens and Jackie Robinson had broken down barriers. But Johnson won that gold medal four years after winning silver in 1956. Rafer wasn’t the greatest black athlete in the world. He was simply the world’s greatest athlete.

“When I came along, and certainly I’m not comparing myself to Jesse Owens and Jackie Robinson because I believe that they did allow me to move closer to a time when people are truly accepted for their own individual worth,” Johnson said. “I think I probably pushed the envelope as far as it could be pushed at the time.”

What is most remarkable about Johnson is that when speaking with him you realize that he has gone through life colorblind despite the obstacles that stood in his way as an African American.

“When I lived in Dallas until I was 9 we had segregation everywhere,” Johnson said. “So my dad decided to move us to Kingsburg, California, which was a little Swedish community and it was suddenly very different. We were the only black family in the area, but no one treated us any differently. We were treated like any other Johnson and there were a lot of Johnsons. That really had an impact on me. I realized that if these people could see past my skin color then I could see past theirs.

“What Kingsburg taught me was that the best thing that I could do as a person is not make excuses for not finding success, not blaming other people for not having opportunities. The best thing that I could do for myself was just go about life in a very positive way achieving as much as I could achieve and being the best that I could be.”

After high school, Johnson went to UCLA. As a senior he was elected president of the student body—a moment that made national news, but for Rafer it was no big deal.

“I was elected student body president of my elementary school at Roosevelt. I was elected student body president of my high school. So, by the time I got to UCLA it was just another student body presidency. It worked on other levels and as far as I was concerned there was no reason it couldn’t work on this level.”

What pushed my father’s reverence for Johnson over the top was his close affiliation with Robert Kennedy.

“As I got to know Robert Kennedy, I made a commitment to myself that if this man ever ran for political office, I would support him,” Johnson said. “I was working for NBC at the time and they told me they would have to take me off the air if I openly supported [Kennedy]. I told them, ‘if that’s what you have to do,’ so yes, they did.

“The senator was interested in the contribution that we as individuals could make to our country and to our society. He never looked at color in terms of who could make those contributions. He lived his life in a way that he wanted all American citizens to live their life and that is to take all their skills and to the best of their abilities make their best contribution to our democracy at whatever level that is.”

For many people in my parents’ generation the assassination of Robert Kennedy in 1968 was considered the “third strike”, following the assassination earlier that year of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and in 1963 of John F. Kennedy.

When Robert Kennedy died in that kitchen in the Ambassador Hotel on Wilshire Boulevard many of the “baby boomers” lost hope in the U.S. political system. Rafer, a longtime friend of Kennedy, was walking with him through the kitchen the day that fatal shot was fired.

“[Kennedy’s death] was one of the most devastating moments in my life,” Johnson said. “When it happened, I was actually five or six yards from the senator holding (his wife) Ethel’s hand. When the shots were fired, I looked up and I thought it was balloons popping. I saw Sirhan [Sirhan] and what looked like powder after hearing the sound and the smoke from a weapon and the senator falling away. I was able to get Ethel down on the floor out of the way and then I made a move for the senator and I was the first one there.

“I then grabbed Sirhan, and I got my hand on his gun hand. Immediately after that, Roosevelt Grier was there, and we all went to the floor. The senator was about three feet away and I could see that he was injured. And it was just almost like it wasn’t real. It was like eventually I would wake up from this terrible dream. It’s just so hard to…(Johnson paused and teared up at this point)…I mean, when you really get to start talking about it…um…it was a tough time.”

My parents would tell me that that moment had changed them. When they witnessed Johnson standing over Kennedy after he was shot, I was in my mother’s womb and they both agreed at that moment to bring Rafer’s namesake into our family lineage.

Shortly after Johnson co-founded the Special Olympics with Eunice Kennedy, one of Roberts sisters in 1969.

“Eunice and I knew that there was more to life for people with mental [disabilities] that what our structure at that point allowed to happen. Eunice felt that life should be better for those people. Again, at whatever level we come to life we can all improve. But people that were mentally [challenged] were never given that chance. They were classified and institutionalized and basically left to die. The Special Olympics changed all that.”

Meeting Johnson, I finally understood what it was that made my father gravitate toward him on more than simply an academic level. Johnson has never lost his passion or compromised his ideals. 

Peter Ueberroth once said of Johnson, “If you made a list of the top 10 role models in America, I don’t know who the other nine would be, but Rafer would be one of them.”

All my life my father had been my role model. After he passed away, I found myself in the strange position of living in aa world without someone to look up to. That changed when I met the man my father looked up to.

Robert Steele

Assistant Deputy Chief Legal Counsel at Illinois Department of Corrections

4 年

Thank you for sharing! I met Rafer Johnson at Hershey Track and Field Nationals when I was in elementary and middle school - a great man indeed!

Stephen Klava

Technology & Mechanical Leader

4 年

I think we should celebrate the life of a great person Rafer Johnson. What a legacy to follow but you are doing great work Rafer Weigel.

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Mike Skogmo

Co-Founder at LOST iN

4 年

Great story. Truly amazing person. I had the pleasure of working with him when I was a lowly intern at Special Olympics Southern California -- I helped him put together a submission for a community achievement award (Fernando Award Foundation). He went on to win the award because of his remarkable record of philanthropy and achievement, and in an amazing gesture, he invited me -- the 22 y/o former office intern who'd moved on from the organization -- to attend the awards gala and sit at his table with he and his family. Absolute class act.

JD GERSHBEIN

THE LINKEDIN? STYLE GUIDE | Pioneering the Next Frontier of LinkedIn? for Leaders, Business Owners, C-Suite Executives, Physicians, Advisors, and Creators in Brand Transformation and Culture-Driven B2B Organizations

4 年

R esilient A uthentic F ocused E mpathic R emarkable

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