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Blacks blast Bruce

Ex-Panther says Ratner ‘disrespects us, denigrates us’

The Brooklyn Paper


Is Bruce Ratner’s basketball card a race card?

That question was raised by two fiery black leaders at an Atlantic Yards forum last week at First Unitarian Church in Brooklyn Heights.

A centerpiece of Ratner’s project is a basketball arena for his Brooklyn-bound New Jersey Nets.

“[He] has the audacity to talk about a basketball stadium, like black people would be impressed,” said Bob Law, a radio commentator, Prospect Heights restaurateur and former Black Panther. “Like hoops is something we would really need.

“We are really not going to sit quietly and allow you to disrespect us and denigrate us … [This] rings with a kind of contempt for poor people and black people.”

Law hammered all night on the race issue, which has bubbled up at other forums, but was also the driving force behind the Community Benefits Agreement Ratner signed with eight minority groups.

“[Ratner believes that] because you are poor, you ought to accept any job you can get, like, ‘You poor little ignorant Negroes,’” Law said.

The Rev. Dennis Dillon of the Brooklyn Christian Center in Fort Greene joined Law in his opposition to Atlantic Yards — but Dillon focused on the type of permanent jobs Ratner says will be created at the arena.

And he was more circumspect in his rhetoric.

“The black community is not all about some low-paying jobs that will force us to live elsewhere anyway,” said Dillon, who evoked the civil rights movement as a model for black opposition to Atlantic Yards.

“We believe, like Martin Luther King did, that justice must roll down like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream,” he said.

But there was another man of god in the house who defended the Ratner project

“Ratner’s always been fair, just, concerned and compassionate to me,” said the Rev. Herbert Daughtry of the House of the Lord Pentacostal Church in Boerum Hill.

“He’s one of the more liberal, progressive developers in the country.”

Daughtry argued that Ratner’s project could reverse the chronic joblessness of his parishioners.

“Can you imagine the despair, the sense of hopelessness, that unemployment breeds? This is an opportunity for people to be employed.”

At the forum, it was left to Daughtry alone to defended Ratner’s position because neither Forest City Ratner, nor anyone else among the project’s supporters, accepted the Unitarian Church’s invitation to appear.

“I didn’t want to go over there and get beat up on,” said James Caldwell, president of BUILD and a Ratner supporter. “I am not a punching bag. It was not neutral territory. There was nothing I could say or do to change [the opposition’s] mind.”

Betty Wagoner, who organized the event, said the church had sought “a balanced forum, a community information thing with representatives from the proponents and the opponents.

“The church itself has not taken a position on the matter,” she added. “But only Rev. Daughtry offered to attend.”

 

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