John Ross dies at 72

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When John Ross left Terminal Island, the federal prison in Los Angeles, after serving a couple of years for refusing the Vietnam draft, the warden shook his head and said: "Ross, you never learned how to be a prisoner."

I'm not writing the epitaph for whatever gravestone he has or doesn't have, wherever it might be in the world, but that's what I'd put on it: "John Ross, 1938-2011. Never learned how to be a prisoner."

John, who died over the weekend, was a poet, author, activist, agitator and uncontrollable shit disturber, utterly and sometimes insanely fearless, pure of heart and devoted to the cause of social justice so deeply that he could never let up, even for a minute. He was also my friend.

John was a tenant organizer in San Francisco in the 1960s. He ran for supervisor once on a platform of rent control and ending the war; he was kicked off the ballot on the basis that he was a convicted felon. He never got his filing fee back.

After a while, he headed north for Arcata, back to the land, so to speak, and became something of a farmer. He wrote poetry, self-published maybe half a dozen books, most of which I have, some of which are probably lost forever. He wrote freelance for the Guardian, but he had no phone; you'd call him at a bar in Arcata (he swore later that Thomas Pynchon was one of his barmates), leave a message and he'd check in when he got it.

Then in 1984, he showed up at our office in San Francisco, fleeing the Campaign Against Marijuana Planting, which had raided his plot, trashed his house, thrown his typewriter out the window and missed capturing him by a few minutes. He sold the last of the crop in the city, found a room and started writing for us regularly.

He was one of the single most talented writers I've ever met -- and a reporter willing to go anywhere for a story. He was also an absolute pain in the ass to work with. Every John Ross story I ever edited was a nightmare. He hated editors, almost as a matter of religion; every single word was sacred, and anytime I tried to mess with what he'd created he'd threaten to quit. "Take my name off the masthead; I'm never working for you again" was almost a mantra with us. It got to the point where I had to say: No, John. You can't quit. You're part of this operation forever, like it or not. And he always came around.

But it's not a surprise that he never held down a real job for long.

Sandy Close at Pacific News Service sent him to Mexico City after the big earthquake in 1985, and he wound up at the Hotel Isabel, where he lived for the next 25 years. He took on stories nobody else would do or could do; he'd go places nobody else would dare. "Tim," he'd always tell me, "you have to go where the story is."

When the Zapatistas began their rebellion, he hitched a ride south from Mexico City, then hiked into the hills in Chiapas with a bag of granola and a couple of bottles of water, found the rebels in a little hamlet, met Subcommander Marcos and got interviews and information that left the rest of the media in the dust. In the first story he sent me, he described seeing a couple of reporters from the San Francisco Chronicle zipping by in a fancy rented jeep, with about $1,000 worth of camera gear, totally befuddled. They were out of their league; John was right at home.

He called me once, late at night, to ask if I knew any doctors in town. Turns out he'd been beaten pretty badly by the Mexican authorities just before getting on a plane to SF. I asked him how it happened, and he told me that he'd decided, on his own, to stand in the Mexico City airport and make a speech denouncing the government. The cops didn't respond kindly.

He went to Iraq before the war to serve as a human shield in Baghdad (his emails were all signed "John Ross, humanshield"), left after having some clashes (imagine that) with his Iraqi government minders, travelled all over the world writing and selling his books, sent me pieces from everywhere, lost his eye to an old injury from fighting with the SFPD (his email signature became "Juan Eye"), won and refused an award from the City of San Francisco, wrote a major investigative piece on the death of journalist Brad Will and kept writing until the very end. When he was diagnosed with terminal liver cancer, he started signing his emails "John Ross, not dead yet."

The last message I got was on Nov. 4. After complaining some more about the cops, he wrote:

"it appears ive written my last articles for the bay guardian -- the doctors have given me six months on the outside and then its goodbye this cruel world -- we raised some hell when i was here." It's signed: "insolidarity johnross enroute."

Yes, John: We raised some some hell when you were here. Good luck enroute. And I will miss you forever.

John Ross leaves a son, Dante A. Ross, a daughter, Carla Ross-Allen, and a granddaughter, Zoe Ross-Allen, as well as a stepdaughter, Dylan Melbourne and her daugther Honore, as well as a sister, Susan Gardner. Memorial info is pending; I'll keep you posted.

You can read some of John's recent articles here and here and a lot more here.

Comments

Tiempo Latino rinde homenaje a John Ross
Por Pablo Bello

Con profunda pena les comunico que el el periodista John Ross, falleció ayer 17 de enero en Michoacán, México.
Ross fue un periodista comprometido con las causas justas como lo fue el alzamiento de los indígenas zapatistas en Chiapas, México.
Ross escribió sobre la lucha zapatista y también sobre la Ciudad de México. Vivió mucho tiempo en México y también fue residente de San Francisco y oriundo de New York.
Aunque nunca tuve la oportunidad de platicar a fondo con Ross, si le vi varias veces en San Francisco, California. Recuerdo que un día se presentó en una actividad política, de las muchas que se hacen allá.
Sorprendió a todos cuando empezó a gritar: ¡Todos somos Marcos! ¡Todos somos Marcos! Eran los tiempos más álgidos de la guerra del gobierno mexicano en contra de los indígenas zapatistas, que se habían alzado en armas en contra del gobierno corrupto priísta del presidente Carlos Salinas de Gortari.
La mañana del nuevo año de de 1994, el mundo se despertó con el alzamiento de los zapatistas, el Tratado de Libre Comercio (NAFTA por sus siglas en inglés) ya había sido aprobado y Salinas prometía a México y al mundo entero que los mexicanos de la noche a la mañana serían primer mundistas. ¡Oh que error del pelochas Salinas! Los zapatistas lo dejaron desnudo en unas cuantas horas.
Los inversionistas de Estados Unidos y de todo el mundo entero se dieron cuenta de que Salinas era un farsante, quería despojar a los campesinos de sus tierras para dárselas a latifundistas mexicanos y extranjeros. Un vende patrias como se le conoce en México, pero los zapatistas le dijeron: ¡Ni maíz paloma!
Sin embargo, las leyes del Tratado de Libre Comercio ocasionaron la migración masiva de campesinos a los Estados Unidos, años más tade.
Después de la toma de Las Margaritas en el año nuevo, los zapatistas fueron reprimidos violentamente, el ejército mexicano ejecutó a mansalva a docenas de indígenas chiapanecos, que según el gobierno mexicano tenían nexos con los zapatistas, unos días después del alzamiento zapatista.
Así estaban las cosas en México, y así las contaba Ross en uno de sus tantos libros y reportajes. Meses más tarde, el presidente mexicano Ernesto Zedillo perseguía a los zapatistas y en especial a uno de sus líderes que era el Comandante Marcos.
El gobierno identificó al comandante Marcos, como un profesor universitario, pero no lo pudo capturar. Sin embargo, con el apoyo del ejército y del gobierno estatal y federal, escuadrones de la muerte asesinaron a docenas de indígenas en Chiapas por simpatizar con el Ejército Zapatista, meses después.
En esos días Ross gritaba: ¡Todos somos Marcos! Y así es como recuerdo a Ross. Descanse en paz John Ross, guardian de de la justicia y guerrero invencible armado sólo con tinta y papel.

Posted by Guest on Jan. 18, 2011 @ 2:14 pm

I first learned of John Ross many years ago when he was writing for the old San Francisco Examiner (I think it was). His articles on Mexico were so good that they put everything else in the paper to shame every time they appeared.

I've loved the guy ever since, even though I don't share his political views. I'm very sorry he's passed on...he was the kind of exceptional individual you never want to see disappear.

Posted by Harumphty Dumpty on Jan. 18, 2011 @ 5:11 pm

On December 16, 2010 I met John in the lobby of the hotel Isabel and had a short conversation with him as he signed his book "El Montruo" for me. He looked gaunt and haggered with little energy. He told me of his terminal cancer I commiserated and I told him how much I enjoyed his book which made him smile. As he signed he told me it would probably be the last book he would ever sign. I took fotos and we hugged knowing it would be the last time I would see him alive

Posted by GuestJ JIMENEZ on Jan. 18, 2011 @ 6:27 pm

Thanks Tim for that lovely eulogy. Yes, John WAS a hell of a writer, and a brave soul as well. He will be missed.

Steven Hill

Posted by Guest Steven Hill on Jan. 19, 2011 @ 12:49 am

among my cast of characters i have learned to love and cherish in my life, none is loftier in the pantheon than brave john ross, visceroyal epicarean, who i was first introduced to by his brother bio-regionalist peter berg in john's arcata phone bar, the jambalaya. passed on the golden jubilee of ike's mlitary-industrial complex warning and the anniversary of the great san francisco be-in of 1967. also the birthday of the legendary berkeley campus rabble rouser stoney burke. yeah, it's tight like that.

Posted by Guestarnie passman on Jan. 19, 2011 @ 8:54 am

among my cast of characters i have learned to love and cherish in my life, none is loftier in the pantheon than companero brave john ross, visceroyal epicarean, who i was first introduced to by his brother bio-regionalist peter berg in john's arcata phone bar, the jambalaya.
took to rebel journalism after fasting in front of banks to protest 3rd world debt. born in new york in walter winchell's apartment; mom was a theatrical press agent for the left.
passed on the golden jubilee of ike's mlitary-industrial complex warning and the anniversary of the great san francisco be-in of 1967. also the birthday of the legendary berkeley campus rabble rouser stoney burke. yeah, john was tight like that.

Posted by Guestarnie passman on Jan. 19, 2011 @ 9:05 am

among my cast of characters i have learned to love and cherish in my life, none is loftier in the pantheon than companero brave john ross, visceroyal epicarean, who i was first introduced to by his brother bio-regionalist peter berg in john's arcata phone bar, the jambalaya.
took to rebel journalism after fasting in front of banks to protest 3rd world debt. born in new york in walter winchell's apartment; mom was a theatrical press agent for the left. fitting he passed on the golden jubilee of ike's mlitary-industrial complex warning and the anniversary of the great san francisco be-in of 1967. also the birthday of the legendary berkeley campus rabble rouser stoney burke. yeah, john was tight like that.

Posted by Guestarnie passman on Jan. 19, 2011 @ 9:07 am

among my cast of characters i have learned to love and cherish in my life, none is loftier in the pantheon than companero brave john ross, visceroyal epicarean, who i was first introduced to by his brother bio-regionalist peter berg in john's arcata phone bar, the jambalaya.
took to rebel journalism after fasting in front of banks to protest 3rd world debt. born in new york in walter winchell's apartment; mom was a theatrical press agent for the left. fitting he passed on the golden jubilee of ike's mlitary-industrial complex warning and the anniversary of the great san francisco be-in of 1967. also the birthday of the legendary berkeley campus rabble rouser stoney burke. yeah, john was tight like that.

Posted by Guestarnie passman on Jan. 19, 2011 @ 9:11 am

I knew John fairly well... he did indeed hold near full time residence at the "Jambalaya" Club in Arcata where also now departed legendary bar mom, musician and manager Chloe Damus would pass on said messages to many of her flock. And Thomas Pynchon was (maybe still is) indeed one of many Humboldt County recluse characters (including the late Don Van Vliet aka "Captain Beefheart") that had man-caves nearby.
John would drop in on a number of us who were DJ's on the local campus radio station KHSU at the time to kvetch and maybe read a poem on air. I'll post one on youtube.com shortly I was able to put my hands on from an old mid-70's aircheck of a fellow KHSUvian Gary Vradenberg featuring John reading a prescient poem that could foreshadow his own legacy today. RIP John... what a life!
Alan Olmstead
Eureka, CA

Posted by Guest Alan Olmstead on Jan. 19, 2011 @ 10:53 am

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXxiQkG0VgQ

John Ross reading his "Eulogy for Lee Morgan", circa 1973, on KHSU-FM.

Posted by Guest Alan Olmstead on Jan. 19, 2011 @ 12:28 pm

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fhj1m4FiEOY

Just one (in six parts!) of many of John Ross on YouTube (search "John Ross activist", "author", "poet" etc). This one from The Heartland Cafe in Chicago on the occasion of the release of his last book about a year ago on Mexico City.

Posted by Guest Alan Olmstead on Jan. 19, 2011 @ 12:59 pm

Alan, please, I hope you can find that tape of Ross at KHSU you have from before my time. I will love to air it on the one year anniversary of his leaving to compliment a show I have with him at Sista's Place from 1992.
Peacfully,
Sista

Posted by Guest sista soul on Apr. 30, 2011 @ 12:40 pm

Dear Reader;

John Ross was a great man.

Mr. Ross' life and times were a keen awareness of the impermanence and suffering inherent in this world, a subject he frequently wrote of. Many owe much to this man. He drew on wells of compassion, generosity, intuition, and justice, often camouflaged by the more complicated, bristly, and prickly parts of his personality. Yes, he could be difficult, intolerant, touchy, and loud. Nonetheless, he inspired profound feelings of connection and gratitude in many people and his generosity and writing touched many more. He was legendary in Arcata, Ca., perfecting his craft and sense of humanity and injustice before moving to the Bay Area and the larger world beyond.

There's far more to Mr. Ross. I encourage you, the dear reader, to please view the local Humboldt County, CA. link, below. It contains an excellent article he authored on a pertinent subject of racism here in 1982.

You may leave a personal comment if you like about John; I humbly encourage you to do so. Mr. Ross, our traveling Humboldt 'investigative poet' and first rate journalist, would have liked that.

http://humboldtherald.wordpress.com/2011/01/17/john-ross-passes-on/#comm...

peace, Mr. Ross. skips

Posted by Guest skippy from Humboldt on Jan. 19, 2011 @ 11:43 am

El Monstruo: Dread and Redemption in Mexico City

Really interesting book, especially the first three chapters.

I lived in the same neighborhood right after the Quake, but, unfortunately, never ran into him at the time.

Posted by Barton on Jan. 19, 2011 @ 3:03 pm

Spooky. I was just writing to someone about John for the first time in years, and was planning to write to him also for the first time in a long while, about an upcoming delegation to northern Mexico -, when my eldest daughter sent me Tim's obit,and I learned with some shock of John's recent passing. [Tim I remember from Vandenberg resistance days long ago.] I knew John somewhat fleetingly, yet felt a deep connection and was honored by his friendship - from Oventic en los altos de Chiapas to the Hotel Isabel, Cafe La Blanca etc to my correspondance with him before my 2004 trip to Najaf, Iraq.. My eldest daughter was only 7 or 8 years old (the youngest gringa or gringo there I suppose) when we traveled to the encuentro in La Realidad with John, camped out in la selva, went to many meetings, cooled off in the creek, and so on. I visited John again and again in following years when I traveled to the conflict-torn hinterlands of Guerrero or took delegations there.
He was such an amazing person.
Despite having been, regretably out of touch with him in recent years, I - like so many others - will really miss him ... and the now-sharper & more poignant memories of his eloquent words, ready laughter, deep compassion and passion for justice, his love and rage and vision, will echo in my mind and prod me onwards - back to Mexico, and forward in la lucha, including my organizing endeavors with ARROWS (Alliance to Resist Robotic Warfare & Society). . May John's compassionate spirit - like the final chant of la lucha sigue sigue sigue at the end of his book Rebellion from the Roots - go on and on and on - into the deep light beyond the darkness.

Peter Lumsdaine
tierralinda@live.com

Posted by Guest on Jan. 20, 2011 @ 12:57 am

John Ross was a hero, the real deal!

What Tim neglected to highlight in his obit was the fact that when John went into the hills with only his granola and water in search of the revolution, HE WAS OVER 60 YEARS OLD! John's dogged search for poetry, social justice, and The Story never ended in this life. For his efforts, John became the first reporter to break the story of the Zapatista uprising (in the Anderson Valley Advertiser no less!) for which he won a National Book Award.

Not that John cared for awards. His non-acceptance of SF's proclaimed "John ROss Day" in 2009 was classic!

I was priveleged to get to meet and interview Johna couple times at the end of his life. I prize an email he sent from Mexico City when my story about the Mission's notorious Hunt's Donuts came out. John wrote to more or less reminisce with me about the Epicenter of Crime at 20th and Mission and I felt proud to be part of a long lineage of outlaw writers. John wrote, "I spent some of the worst years of my life at that place."

I love these lines from John's non-acceptance speech on John Ross Day:
"Life is, like being a reporter, a kind of death sentence. Pardon me for having lived it so fully."

Posted by Erick Lyle on Jan. 20, 2011 @ 6:12 pm

whoops... in my excitement, I got my math slightly wrong. John was 54 when he broke the Zapatista story... But, STILL... pretty inspiring!

Posted by Erick Lyle on Jan. 20, 2011 @ 8:30 pm

Although I met him a few times John Ross barely knew me. I was just another grey haired pony tailed Humboldt progressive to him.

But I knew him and he had a measurable impact on my life. Some might say, when pondering an appropriate response to a dilemma, "what would Jesus do about this? Or "what would Buddha do?" I find myself saying, when confronted by yet another example of official hypocrisy and outrage, "What would John Ross do?"

No doubt John Ross would launch a frontal assault on the miscreant armed only with a pen and the truth in complete disregard for the personal consequences to himself, letting the chips fall where they may. He paid the physical price for being a speaker of truth to power. Nearly blinded in one eye by a cop's nightstick. Six teeth knocked out. Any number of other crippling injuries resulting from his various confrontations with the forces of reaction.

Would that I had his courage.

Before I knew John I knew of him. I was working with the Nicaragua Information Center in Berkeley trying to stop Ronald Reagan's criminal Contra War on Nicaraguan peasant farmers. We were very much heartened and inspired in those days by John's reporting from Central America in the San Francisco Chronicle.

I moved to Sacramento to pursue a teaching career and, sorry to say, lost track of John.

More than a decade later, on my retirement, my wife and I moved to Trinidad, California attracted by it's beauty and politically progressive community.

One day, while exploring my new community, I came across an intriguing tombstone in the Trinidad Cemetery: "Murdered by Capitalism" it said. The inscription was preceded by "E.B. Schnaubelt, Born April 5th 1855 Died May 22nd 1913" Wow, I thought. I've got to research this one.

Shortly after that our new neighbors Ron and Nikki invited us to dinner one night and there was fellow dinner guest none other than John Ross himself. You can imagine my astonishment to find that he was a part time neighbor of ours living occasionally with his long-time friend and environmental activist Sid Dominitz just down Stagecoach Road.

Well, John beat me to the punch on the "Murdered by Capitalism" research. In fact he literally wrote the book on it by the same title. There was nothing for me to add.

(As John Ross revealed, E.B. Schnaubelt was the brother of Rudolph Schnaubelt who was accused of of tossing the Haymarket Square bomb in Chicago on May 4th 1886. There where four Schnaubelt brothers who all scattered after the bomb exploded and spent the rest of their lives on lam. Ed ended up in Trinidad, went into a small business, fell into a dispute with his partner and, in that dispute, was killed by a night-watchman employed by his estranged partner. Ed's widow had the tombstone installed with the inscription so that posterity would know of her interpretation of the events.)

As part of the book's release I joined John in what was probably the only political protest march held in Trinidad's history. We gathered at the local shopping center and, led by John, went all of 500 yards to the cemetery where we communed with the spirits of the Haymarket Martyrs.

I am proud to say that my little seaside town of Trinidad was able to provide John with, not only occasional rest and solace from the arduous task of bringing down the Empire, but also provided him with inspiration for an additional literary barrages against the forces of reaction from his favorite, place atop the barricades.

So, that's my experience with Mr. Ross. I am proud a humbled to have known this man of courage, action and principal.

Posted by Guest on Jan. 24, 2011 @ 5:58 pm

Finding a quiet place to study in Nelson Hall at Humboldt State University in the early 80′s, yours truly was nearly booted out by an out-of-the-area special interest group coming in to lecture– but allowed to stay “as long as I was quiet.”

The group was a small gathering of 40-50 year olds, looking very conservative in their attire and outlook. This national group, Accuracy in Media (AIM), led by chief-fat-cat Reed Irvine suspiciously dressed in a tailored three piece suit and looking rather out of place, was here not only to collect his hefty salary and per diem expenses but to present the premise: setting the record straight on important news and media issues that have received, in their view, biased and slanted coverage. Mr. Irvine and AIM called onto citizens to contact newsmakers, reporters and news corporations to end perceived and deliberate liberal media bias, giving a few examples.

A voice from the back of the room immediately questioned their intent and agenda.

“Who are you, Pilgrim?” Mr. Reed asked.

“I’m John Ross,” the voice answered.

“And, Pilgrim, what do you do?”

“I’m an Investigative Poet and Journalist!” came the reply.

“Oh, do you write Letters to the Editor, Pilgrim?” Mr. Reed condescendingly asked.

"No."

John Ross boldly stood up. He wasn’t about to take this sitting down. Nor coyly be referred to as ‘pilgrim.’

His voice firm and thundering, John laid down his qualifications. Without missing a beat, he then thoroughly peppered AIMs connections to its own bias and slants in the media, questioned their funding from right wing conservative groups ranging from the Republican Party to John Birchers, having unfavorable editors fired and forced retractions made, and AIM's deliberate role in massacre cover-ups in El Salvador and other incidents leading all the way up the ranks to the Reagan Administration. All the while barely coming up for air. John Ross unequivocably knew his details, facts, people and questions… and his direction. His tempo was spot on, too.

This was not going well for AIM. In fact, it was teetering quite sideways on a lone wobbly wheel.

Like a train wreck, AIM's meeting came to a grinding and spectacular halt. Mr. Irvine was at a flabbergasting loss to shut Mr. Ross, Investigative Journalist, up. John continued until Mr. Irvine finally threw down his last ace card in desperate exasperation.

“I’ll have you arrested!” Mr. Irvine roared, “for disturbing the peace! Call the police! Call the police now!”

Mr. Ross roared back, “Call the police. I’ll have you arrested– for violating civil liberties, freedom of speech, the press, and of assembly! AIM is a dishonest sham, a front group for propaganda, and you’re deceptively telling lies to everyone! You’re not revealing your right wing ties and agenda to our citizens here, the People, even when asked! AIM won’t– and doesn’t– allow free speech! What kind of fairness and accuracy in media is this? Go ahead, call the police! Have me arrested!”

Uh-oh. Here's a fine test of democracy, I thought; something bad's gonna happen and that wobbly wheel fell off long ago.

"Call the police!"

The campus police came all right. Pronto. They stood by and refused to arrest Mr. Ross once both sides were aired and explained; or more precisely, vociferously argued and yelled over. AIM and Mr. Reed, his three piece suit and his supporters, promptly packed up and left town unceremoniously indignant and bewildered. They’ve never returned. After that kind of welcome, would you?

Pleasantly amazed and shocked over this drama unfolding before my very eyes and ears, Mr. Ross stood up for a righteous and just cause; he wasn’t merely our local Humboldt poet-journalist, he was a complete fire-breathing dragon that roared– as thin and diminutive as he initially appeared.

At that moment I knew Arcata was a very special and unique place– and this wouldn’t be the last we’d hear of Mr. John Ross, author, activist, agitator, investigative poet and journalist.

Rest in peace, my friend. Many owe much to you.
...peace, skips

Posted by Guest skippy on Jan. 25, 2011 @ 10:02 pm

Thank you for that story.
I never met Ross but the more I read about him, the more I love him.

I can tell many others loved and admired him too.

regards,
Robert

Posted by Guest Robert Kolbe on Mar. 06, 2011 @ 10:38 pm

I was so, so lucky to spend a small part of my childhood at his knee....Thank you, John, for telling me tales and truths others thought me too young to hear.
I remember them.

Posted by The Little Red-Haired Girl from Westhaven on Feb. 03, 2011 @ 5:19 pm

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