Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Alligator, Mississippi has a New Mayor: Tommie 'Tomaso' Brown

by Maggie at Maggie's Notebook

Alligator, Mississippi has a new mayor. For thirty (30) years, Robert Fava has served as the tiny town's mayor but a new day has come. Tommie 'Tomaso' Brown is Alligator's mayor. In a town that is mostly Black, and with the only three businesses operating, and all owned by Whites, Mr. Brown's win has made history.

Tommie 'Tomaso' Brown

Tommie Brown said he ran on a platform of "change." Mr. Fava said he ran on a platform of "30 years of dedicated service." Mr. Brown promised the residents of Alligator a swimming pool and a recreation center. Mr. Fava said he was also ready for change and stepping down is a "weight off my mind."

Mr. Brown said he never thought a Black man could be the mayor of Alligator, but Barack Obama inspired him.
When he won, I decided that I knew the changes that needed to be made here and I thought that I could make those changes.
Among Mr. Brown's plans for the towns is to get more government funding to give people better living conditions. He has plans for the children in the town. Without a phone or fax machine in the town, Tommie asks:
How can we communicate with the outside world and ask for things?
Much of the town was jubilant that a Black man would now mayor the town. Jennifer Green, described as a "black mother of 10," and 31 years old, told this story about losing Mr. Fava as mayor:
Some youngsters ran into Mr Fava’s store to taunt him. “They was pulling down their pants, shouting, ’Kiss my black ass, because we got a black mayor’, swinging their things around and throwing stuff,..."
Ms. Green has her doubts about Tommie Brown:
He says there’s going to be lots of changes and everything with all these kids running around here.

But he do the same thing they do, drinking beer and stuff. You’ve got to stay at home and study the town. Alligator is the kind of place where if you leave your door open, when you come back there ain’t nothing in your house.

There’s guns. Kids knock on your door asking for a beer at three and four in the morning. I get 14-year-olds asking me if I want weed or whatever. They should have just left Mr Robert in there.

Tomaso won’t do anything about any of it. He’s going to put his hand in the cookie jar just at the wrong time and get caught.

The three businesses in town are Mary Ann's Country Store owned by the the Fava's, Gator's Grocery and Diner, owned by Mr. Fava's brother Ronnie, and Bruno's Liquors and Convenience store owned by Fava's cousin Vito Sbravati.

Bruno's Liquors is a busy place, "with the scent of marijuana" in the air and the sidewalk teeming with Blacks "drinking beer and whisky and dancing to music from a boom box." Robert Fava said Aligator is a quiet town, except when "we get that Voodoo and Rap music." Bruno and his wife, Christine were G.W. Bush donors and Bruno's grandfather came to America from Italy via Ellis Island. Bruno calls Tommie, "Tomaso Obama," and Bruno says he doesn't "go by black and white. I go by right and wrong."

Mayor Tommie Brown's town of Alligator, Mississippi is located about 90 miles south of Memphis.

Photo credit: Julian Simmonds

3 comments:

Esquerita said...

Downing beer and whiskey, smoking grass, listening to that "voodoo and rap music" sound like a scene from the local juke joint- God I'm glad I live in the South.

Similar things go on in local politics where I live- a poor county in the Deep South with a large Black majority. Is it any mystery that a once Blacks in Mississippi could vote, black politicians get elected, good ones and bad ones. This new mayor will be gone with the next election if not before then. Look - He won. People in his community voted him in - that's Democracy y'all. If you get elected and do a piss poor job - you don't win re-election. That's the way it is supposed to be in this country.

I swam in a cottonmouth infested swimming hole growing up and loved it - it was all we had for entertainment in the summer. Is a park with a pool such a bad thing for that town? Who paid for the parks where you live? State and federal taxes I'd bet.

Maggie Thornton said...

Esquerita, I think the 30-year Mayor Fava need to go. He obviously had not done much for Alligator.

As both you and the woman quoted in the article says, Mayor Brown will probably be in trouble before long because of his lifestyle.

The people of Alligator need to get together and make some changes, like maybe...no more stealing from each other, and no more drugs right out in the open and available to all those children 'Tomaso' wants to help.

I'm in Oklahoma and I swam in some of those cottonmouth-infested lakes when I was young. Gives me the shivers now.

Thank you so much for commenting on my first post here at Holger Awakens.

keefe said...

Bolivar County

Other than scale, I'm finding it hard to tell the difference between Alligator and Detroit.