The Unlikeliest of
Heros: Garry Sawatzky
By
Debbie Elicksen
Garry
Sawatzky was an angry young man growing up in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
After one last physical fight with his father, he left home at age
17 and joined a bike gang. He was sentenced to 18 months on a
robbery charge, and his life took a turn for the worse in 1985, when
he was convicted of second-degree manslaughter for stabbing an
18-year-old man to death -- a result of a group altercation at a
Winnipeg campsite. Garry was 23 when he was incarcerated at Stony
Mountain Institution. He got out nine years later at age 32.
His
story is a remarkable one because while in prison, the thought of
playing football turned his life completely around.
“It was
very, very strange because it just came to me. It honestly just came
to me. I still don’t understand how. I’m an atheist so I don’t
believe in all that religion stuff. I’m a spiritual atheist. I was
in a sweat lodge, and it’s kind of like, I made a promise. I was in
prison. I only had a couple of years in. That’s why it was so crazy.
Everyone was laughing at me. The bigger I got and the harder I
worked towards it, the more it offended people. I wasn’t taken very
seriously. They said, 'You’re going to be in your thirties when you
get out. Nobody’s going to touch you. Think! What are you doing?
You’re pissing me off!' And I think that’s what happens with kids a
lot. They succumb to that crap.
“Right
after that, the next thing you know, I’m taking university courses.
I found a way to make my own little environment. It was like
training camp for the mind and the body. Then I was on a goal. I was
on a mission. I completed four training cycles in one year. I had
everything planned out. The training cycle went by pretty quick. It
made the time go by very fast. But it did make the time easier.”
Inside
prison, former Winnipeg Blue Bomber running back, Tim Jesse, saw
Garry’s physique while visiting the institution. He began to pass
the word back to his team, and Garry was given an evaluation while
on a day pass. The media caught wind of it, and the prison then
transferred him west to dispel the spotlight. Out of prison, Garry
did get the opportunity to tryout for the Canadian Football League.
“It was
very strange because nothing came instantly. It’s like, show up
tomorrow and we’ll learn how to get into a stance. Show up the next
day and we’ll learn how to run block. I got out of jail and went to
British Columbia Lions after everything blew up in Winnipeg (not
getting the shot with the Bombers). I went to B. C. and they brought
me back every day. I had three months before camp. I was working two
jobs then. There were no promises at that point. It was pretty
unrealistic and a little bit far off. I was just very strong and
fast. They figured they could do something with me.
“In my
first game, I only played two minutes. I went out for a couple of
different series. It was short-lived. I think for the six plays I
had, I did okay, but it was like they were just giving me a little
taste. That was in 1994, and I was only out of jail for a few
months. It freaked me out. I couldn’t even get into my football
pants. I changed my pants three or four times because I didn’t know
what size to wear. They felt so weird every time you put them on.
They felt tight but they were baggy. I’d put a tighter one on. I was
going out of my mind to find the right pair of pants. I never knew
how to wear the stuff since high school.”
Prior
to prison, he had no role models. “I was probably lacking in social
conscious as well. Kids think they’re going to live forever anyway.
It’s easy to burn candles at both ends. Combine that with early
problems in your childhood, and it seems to snowball. When I joined
the gang, it was more because there were others like me. We were a
new family. I bought into it. Not everyone was into that…not
everyone was into the family thing. Everyone was using the club for
whatever their gain was -- whether it was image or money.
“My
story just isn’t about not giving up. I pretty well buried myself
and then I had to find a way out. The part about burying yourself, I
think a lot of kids learn how to do that. They don’t know how to dig
themselves back out. I think I found a way to dig myself back out."
Garry
spent the next several seasons playing for more than one CFL team
but at the same time, he took the time to reach out to, what society
would label as, the unreachable population: kids in prison. “I
think I’ve been to every kiddie prison in the lower mainland in B.
C. I’ve even talked to federal inmates. I’ve talked to law students
and lots of group homes.
“The
kids in prison, I can get right to them. We can cut right through
the game. Who’s our entertainment today? That’s how the kids act.
Everything’s provided for them. They get into trouble and they get
confused. They’re still trying to act like those little tough guys
and yet down deep, they’re still kids. We cut through all that crap.
I’ve been where they are. I know what they’re feeling. I know the
game. Just cut through the crap. When I visit the kids in group
homes, they’re so unreachable. They’re so wound up -- so cocky. It’s
like, when you get in trouble, call me up, and I’ll talk to you.
There are so many times I’ve had to talk to them after they’ve been
in jail. It’s always after the fact that I have the most success
with kids because they’re so cocky until they get in trouble. Once
everything is taken away, that’s the time to rebuild them.
“In
talking to kids, I say, daydream about stuff -- about things that
are mathematically possible. If you make a habit of doing that, if
you daydream about things you can actually obtain, you might be far
off but it’s possible. If it’s not mathematically possible, don’t
dream about it because you’re just wasting your energy.
”Football was mathematically possible because I had a plan. Even
though I didn’t know how I was going to go about it, everything fell
into place. It seemed to be luck. You meet the right people. My life
is still like that. I’m on the right track. I bump into the right
people. They come out of nowhere.
“Join a
good gang. Hanging out with the guys, like in football, there are a
lot of similarities to the guys in the club. Traveling, having a
good time together. Joking and getting together to play a game is
much more accepted than the guys getting together to go party. You
have all these fraternities. Male clubs, where you get together
after work. I think it’s normal for men to come together as groups.
Men feel comfortable in groups -- like the hunting and gathering
thing. Sports just take the place of that.”
While
in jail, Garry was enrolled in university courses majoring in
philosophy but taking courses in anthropology, sociology, and
psychology. He only needed his last five credits to earn his degree.
While talking to kids in prison, he came up with another dream, one
he is relentlessly pursuing.
“I
figure, if you can fix a part of the system and save as many young
ones as you can, that’s when it really goes around. You can slowly
raise the age of a prisoner. The average age of a prisoner is in the
early 20s across the board. It should make people freak right out
because it’s basically, your kids are in jail. That means for the
average age of 21 and 22, there are those that are way too young,
which means the guys that are way too old are getting out to easily.
Save the young, make room for the old.”
His
dream is a farm where these types of kids can be isolated from their
bad influences and learn to start over—get a new lease on life.
“That would be the long term goal. I want to be careful how I
approach this. The system is designed, if you approach anything too
aggressively or too quickly to change something, it’s going to slap
you on the head. You’ve got to make it so inviting that they want to
be a part of what you’re making. You have to approach it like, your
system is good, and we’re just trying to make it better. If you
don’t approach the system with that attitude, you’re going to get
slapped.
“One of
the major flaws I see in the system -- all of these kids come from
different fields. If I go out to any given family, whether it’s a
nice area or a bad area, I’m finding out people are genuinely the
same. They’re all on the same level. The same thing is going on in
both parts of town. I think people in the nice part of town just
hide it. They’re not all good homes or support systems. The very
first thing they do with a kid coming to jail is to rejoin him with
their old support system. Well, the support system he had is what
put him there. One of the things you’ve got to do is wipe out his
old support system completely. Take him to a different location than
where he lived. If he grew up in B. C., put him in the east coast.
Take him away from the people who made him the way he is. Then only
let in the good after that. Have a month chilling out period, where
no one can talk to him when he first comes to the facility.
Everybody from the outside world has to be cut off until they’re
deemed good. As soon as they’re deemed good, then you can’t get
enough of them. Show your support.
“It’s
more of a program. Kids inside can work towards something. It’s not
just fitting the criteria -- you’re in, you’re not. You can’t do it
like that. You say, here’s a pretty stiff criteria, (and they don’t
allow this for the system right now because everything has to be for
the masses). When you see talent, you’ve got to capture it. That kid
is wasting his time playing with blocks, get him with the other kids
that are going to university. The current system has no way of
seeing talent or salvaging it.
“Mostly, environment dictates what you’re going to be like. You want
to create a program to save the ones that are savable. They will
present themselves. Here’s the step-up-to-the-plate program. Find
the kids that are geared for it, just like you do for a business.
Business is going to do the proper research to find out their
marketing strategies. They go for it and then they win. You’ve got
to do that with the kids. Find out the savable and then save them. I
would take a sexually abused kid on my farm but I wouldn’t take an
abuser. It’s not for everyone. There has to be a criteria, and this
is going to be my biggest obstacle. The first thing I want to do
when I first start getting close to this dream farm is get together
an advisory committee. I’d like to sit down all these people I’ve
met—people who would never have been assembled otherwise. They don’t
all have to have degrees. Get all the good people I’ve come across,
and put them in a room. They have something to give. Put them in a
room for a weekend to think and then, take down all the information.
Assemble a table of people that are good people, experienced in the
field, very intelligent, and futuristic, or have had some success in
the past with what I’m doing. I already know where I want to go, but
what an ideal way to work out the future headaches.”
Does a
message from a professional athlete carry more weight? “It makes a
big difference. The kids will give you that instant respect. I’ve
also worked with a lot of coaches. They work hard to get where they
are. They worked years with these kids -- spent their whole life
coaching these kids. And yet, an athlete will pop in for one day,
and everything is put on him. The coach might think, I’m the guy
that helped them get this far, and here’s this guy for one day.
That’s the attitude the kids have. They want to be hands on by the
real thing. They want real players. It takes a really good coach to
be able to share that. I knew this one guy who was so successful as
a coach because he didn’t have a big ego. Not, no, I don’t need any
of those guys. There are coaches like that. It’s not like the guys
don’t want to come out and help. I was helping one guy who said to
me, any time. He always made me feel like I was appreciated. You
don’t just want to show up for an appearance. You want them to show
up because they’re appreciated. I don’t mind giving my time. Most of
the time they require from athletes is just fluff. Signing stuff.
Some players don’t do that stuff on their own. Not everyone is
giving. Not everyone wants to go and help their fellow man. It’s not
in everybody.”
Read other articles and learn more about
Debbie Elicksen.
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