I Spent a Night Patrolling with LightStep, Montreal's Real Life Super Hero
By Julia Jones
Meet LightStep.
LightStep is one of a burgeoning community of so-called Real-life Superheroes (RLSH)—citizens from Argentina to the UK who have decided to patrol their local streets, in costume, doing good deeds. These deeds can range from something as simple as helping to change a tire in Brampton, handing out socks and mitts to the homeless in Windsor, or to straight up vigilantism that led one Washington-based RLSH to being arrested for assault. But LightStep believes de-escalation and harm reduction training are much more important than a uniform, a sidekick, or pepper-spraying a bunch of people you suspect are in a street brawl (like the RLSH in Washington did).
As we start walking, most passers-by are curious about the bright yellow and blue luchador mask. LightStep tells me the mask is a way to protect not only their identity, but also the selflessness of their actions. "The only possibility of justice in giving a gift is for one of the parties to be anonymous," they say. "Otherwise, there's always a reflection on the person who did the giving, and then their generosity is undermined by a self-serving attitude."
We stop to buy crack pipes—to be given away free to users as a method of harm reduction—and LightStep puts them in a backpack along with the first aid kit, needle collection containers, latex gloves, condoms, and socks, gloves and hats.
"Hey, do you need a pipe?" LightStep asks a guy in a raggedy coat in his early 20s.
"Nah, man, but do you know where I can find some dope?" LightStep doesn't know where to get dope.
We continue our trek south, towards Berri-UQAM square, which at this hour is populated by drug dealers and junkies. "I've had junkies throw needles at me... jokingly, but I still had to dodge them," LightStep says. It was also in Berri Square that I learn about LightStep's origin story.
It was the middle of August 2012 and the person who would become LightStep had recently come to Montreal to start a new life with a partner. Seeking a sense of community, and a desire to understand the city, they began walking the streets and meeting the people who inhabit it at night. In Jeanne Mance park, at the foot of Mount Royal, they approached a man going through a backpack they suspected wasn't his, after securing the backpack and its contents, LightStep tracked down its real owner, who was surprised to get his MacBook Pro back. "He said, 'Why would you return it?' and I said that it was the right thing to do. He asked me if I did this all the time, and I was thinking to myself 'Not really.'"
But the idea had been planted.
The next day, LightStep wondered if it was possible to try and be at the right place at the right time to help someone. "My friends said, 'No, you're just going to put yourself in danger, you're just looking for trouble.'—And that was the night I first went into the streets," says LightStep.
"That's the night I met Hawk.
"When I asked him questions he just grimaced or sneered. I said, 'What are you up to tonight?' and he just growled. Then he said, 'I'm looking for a tavern,' and I'm like, 'A tavern? What planet did you come from?"
But then Hawk said something that confirmed any suspicions LightStep had up to that moment. "I'm gonna kill someone tonight." He lifted his shirt and showed a pistol tucked into his pants. Hawk started repeating the phrase in sing-song, "I'm gonna kill someone tonight, I'm gonna kill someone tonight."
At this point, LightStep knew they had to stick around. "If he was gonna kill me, he would have killed me already, and that's what made me stay there. I understood that I was granted a kind of privilege that night that I had to flex in some way."
The two kept walking west, and ran into a group leaving a bar. Hawk said, "Oh, but not these brothers! I won't kill these brothers, they're my brothers." He high-fived them, chatted, and bummed a cigarette.
With Hawk distracted, LightStep decided it was safe to call 911. Not a full minute later a cop car came around. "The cop does this motion [phone gesture], and points at me, then points at Hawk, and I nod, he gives me a thumbs up, and that's it. Four cars come in, lights up, they have him against a fence, they grab him and his gun goes flying. It's like a flash and it's over. He's down, he's on the ground."
LightStep went home thinking that Hawk had been the sign from the universe that called them out to the streets. "I thought that if I could handle that, I could handle anything."
We loop around and start heading west towards downtown. I stop in a Tim Hortons to get a coffee and warm up, and from the line I watch LightStep chat up a stranger. "That guy recognized me from my plain clothes patrol," LightStep tells me later. "He's a sex worker around here, we've met many times." There seems to be a special place in this masked stranger's heart for people who also roam the streets at night, that share this space with them. There was a connection there, something that was broken the moment I walked into the conversation. "See ya around," the sex worker said.
At the corner of St Denis and Ontario, a crowd gathers near an ambulance. We get a closer look and LightStep wants to make sure the person on the ground will be taken care of properly.
"The question is, what are the ways that we can form a more resilient community? For example, imagine a world where there is no police," LightStep explains, in an almost naive tone. "What does that look like? Could you imagine a number other than 911 to call? Who would answer that phone?"
I can't help but wonder who would keep those people in check. Early police forces were nothing more than volunteers, and this sounds like power just changing institutions. LightStep didn't agree.
"Everything that's led up to where we are now, this entire arch of history—we understand that's not totally working. So we have to throw something different in the mix... I'm talking about acting ahistorically. Not to forget history, but to move with a kind of freedom and lightness that will allow us to act differently, to connect, to love differently, to learn, to share." Through the metal mesh on the mask, I see a sparkle in LightStep's eyes. "Could you please wipe my eyes one more time? It's fogging up again."
On the corner of St Laurent and Prince Arthur, a loud crowd forms in front of the late-night greasy spoon La Belle Province. LightStep runs toward it, followed by multiple police officers. People are cheering and enticing two young men to fight, but one of them is being held by two others. Within seconds, the officers are dispersing the crowd and I'm as confused as ever. I lose LS for a second.
A moment later I find him. "Look, I'm not here to replace the police," they tell me. "I'm not interested in chasing bank robbers carrying sacks of coins, or chasing people who are stealing to survive, or doing things in the streets like selling drugs, or prostituting themselves, or however the city has made their lives illegal. I'm not interested in those kind of petty crimes." They tell me the real criminals are the ones with desk jobs, keeping the poor poor, and that's not what LightStep is fighting either. LightStep is about community, about standing up for each other.
I get the feeling that this is what LightStep does most—stepping into situations where something could go wrong, and just talking to people and observing. "Looking for crime to fight—and that's what other Real Lifers are always talking about—that is to misunderstand crime, to misunderstand poverty and desperation, and all these other things that cause violence in the first place." LightStep tells me we can't celebrate yet, that people are hungry, that there is no place to sleep for some folks. "We need to find a way to inspire ourselves to participate in our community," they say.
It's around four in the morning when Matt finally gets into an ambulance, and by then it was time for LightStep and I to part ways.
By the end of the evening I realize that LightStep isn't so much the person under the mask—the slender, vegan feminist queer—but rather a persona that exists with the help of this vegan feminist queer. LightStep could be anyone who is capable of getting up and taking direct action.
@juliatjones
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