TRUE GENTLEMAN ERNIE STILL HAS MORE TO GIVE

by | Sep 20, 2009 | Comment, Detroit Free Press, Sports | 0 comments

It was a late summer night, and in downtown Detroit the Tigers were playing. Miles away, sitting in his chair, Ernie Harwell wanted some ice cream.

“How about you?” he asked me. I said sure, and he turned to his beautiful wife of 68 years and said, “Lulu, let’s have some butter pecan ice cream,” and Lulu rose from the couch to get it, although I imagine Ernie would have done it first if he weren’t sick.

This was last week, in his modest home, where The Last True Gentleman Of The Booth spends every night now, reading quietly, going through letters, enjoying the moments he has left because his moments are dwindling, a game in the late innings. Ernie has inoperable cancer. He accepts it the way good ballplayers accept a strike call. May not like it. Can’t change it.

Anyhow, Ernie Harwell is 91 years old, and he has long since learned to make the best of things. He did it as a young broadcaster on away games when he stayed in the studio, read the ticker, then waited for the sound effect of a smacked bat. He did it for decades in the cramped bird’s-nest booth in old Tiger Stadium, where your spine surrendered to inhuman angles.

He learned it from his father, who suffered an illness that, in his later years, cost him his eyesight. Radio was how his father followed baseball after that, and for every game in his 55 years of broadcasting – through the Dodgers, Giants, Orioles and Tigers – Ernie never forgot that, never forgot how he might be the eyes and ears for someone like his father, who was making the best of it.

Now Ernie makes the best of it, with grace, warmth and faith. Above all, faith. Blessed with modesty

“A church wants you to do the Sunday sermon,” his friend and attorney Gary Spicer said, sitting with stacks of mail and requests. I mentioned that would be a sure way to increase church attendance.

“Oh, I dunno,” Ernie answered, laughing, “They might throw tomatoes.”

It came out “tamay-tahs,” the soft Georgia coda to his words, easy on the ears, like cool tea to the lips. Ernie’s voice has always been soothing – he sounds like baseball would sound if the game could talk – but we forget it’s soothing mostly because Ernie himself is soothing. He is as gentle, open, kind and decent as anyone I have ever met. He was planning for a farewell speech at Comerica Park. Spicer told him there would be a long video and a salute, and then he’d be given the microphone.

“Well, I’ll just talk for 30 seconds,” Ernie said.

And sure enough, when the night came Wednesday, he didn’t go much longer. He walked out briskly, offering his most healthy posture, and told the crowd he was lucky and blessed, especially because his journey was “going to end in the great state of Michigan.” He finished with a “God bless you” and walked to the tunnel. No surprise Ernie always prefers to tell the story, not become it. Lending his voice to a cause

Too late. Harwell’s illness and his farewell speech became national news. Endless accounts of his long career were written, hosannas were thrown, all deserved.

But be careful not to eulogize Ernie because he’s not only still with us, he is entering a phase where he may be more precious than ever. “Maybe I can help somebody else,” he said, after we’d finished the ice cream.

I know he can. Ernie will sit with me on a stage and share his story – and his faith in dealing with cancer – on a special night Sept. 30 at the Fox Theatre. It was already scheduled as a charity launch of a new book I have written, part of which chronicles a broken down church here in Detroit led by a poor pastor who fights to keep it going. Ernie read the book and, during our visit, said he’d like to help the night, where every penny raised goes to aid the homeless.

Well, you always make room for Ernie. So he’ll join Anita Baker, Dave Barry, Joe Dumars, Kem, Ken Brown and others. My hope is we can fill the Fox Theatre and, when Ernie is finished, give him an ovation he will never forget. If you’d like to join us, please get tickets at Ticketmaster.com or call 800-745-3000.

If you need a reason, here’s one. On his way down to his big night at Comerica, Ernie first drove by that crumbling church, unannounced, in a rundown section of Detroit. And when he saw the pastor, he rolled down his window and said, “Hi, I’m Ernie Harwell. I just wanted to meet you.”

The Last True Gentleman Of The Booth is making the best of it. We are all better for it.

Contact MITCH ALBOM: 313-223-4581 or malbom@freepress.com

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Mitch Albom writes about running an orphanage in impoverished Port-au-Prince, Haiti, his kids, their hardships, laughs and challenges, and the life lessons he’s learned there every day.

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