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Soldier with a pen' comes home to Village a last time

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  • Soldier with a pen' comes home to Village a last time

    The Villager, NY
    Downtown Express
    Aug 19 2005

    Soldier with a pen' comes home to Village a last time

    By Lincoln Anderson

    Steven Vincent came back to the East Village from Iraq last week,
    about the time he had been planning to.

    Vincent, 49, had intended to come home to E. 11th St. this month to
    work on a book on the historic city of Basra, from where he had been
    reporting. But on Aug. 2 he was kidnapped and shot to death by masked
    gunmen in that city, becoming the first American journalist to be
    attacked and killed in the Iraq war. It's believed his exposes on the
    rise of Shiite fundamentalists and insurgents in Basra are what led
    to his death.

    Vincent was waked at Peter Jarema Funeral home on E. Seventh St. last
    Saturday and Sunday, followed by a funeral Monday at Middle
    Collegiate Church on Second Ave. The church was filled to capacity
    with his friends and family.

    As he lay in an open wooden coffin - the hole from the fatal bullet
    covered over on his head by a mortician's artifice - Vincent's two
    best friends spoke, recalling him as a man of great intellect and
    provocative ideas with a thirst to always learn about life.

    Jon Roth, who knew Vincent growing up in California from when they
    were boys and who was his college roommate, said Vincent defied
    categories.

    "He was a soldier whose weapon was the pen," he said. "Steve's words
    explored the murky ambiguity between conservative and liberal. He
    often surprised or annoyed people when he went against their
    perceived wisdom."

    Roth noted that Vincent, in everything he did, interacted with
    people, whether it was hitchhiking to New York from the West Coast or
    working as a late-night taxi driver or guard at the Met. He called
    him a quintessential American - son of an Armenian mother and a
    father who boasted U.S. Civil War veteran ancestors - in search of
    the melting-pot dream.

    Choking back emotion, his voice filled with rage, Roth turned to look
    at Vincent and said, "The evil man who killed him could still his
    voice - but not his vision, not his words."

    Verne Dertimanis, another college friend, recalled days at U.C.
    Berkeley, road trips and digging the Clash, Pistols and Springsteen.
    Ultimately, Vincent found the Bay Area "too confining" and left for
    New York City.

    "He was an American hero," he said.

    In the coffin with Vincent were mementoes to accompany him on his
    final journey: Frank Sinatra CD's, a cigar, Bombay Sapphire gin,
    books by Nietzsche and Jung, a Spider-man comic, flash cards - like
    the ones he had been using to work on his French, Arabic and Latin.

    "Steven, like Jesus, was murdered doing what he thought necessary,"
    said Jacqueline Lewis, Middle Collegiate Church's senior minister.
    She noted Vincent's probing mind had kept her on her toes in theology
    classes she led.

    Lisa Ramaci, Vincent's widow, his parents and sister gave him last
    kisses goodbye before the coffin lid was closed.

    Throughout the service, Ramaci clutched an American flag folded
    military style into a triangle. Afterwards she said, no, it wasn't
    from the government, but from the funeral home.

    "The government gave me nothing," she said, "except his embalmed
    body."

    The crowd was diverse, reflecting Vincent's wide-ranging interests.
    There were people from the art world, including from "Art and
    Antiques" magazine, where he formerly worked, and from Sotheby's,
    where Ramaci worked. One of the twin hosts from "Antiques Roadshow"
    was among them. There were the neighbors and community members and
    former Councilmember Antonio Pagan whom Vincent worked with in the
    early and mid-1990s to fight for cleaning up Tompkins Square Park and
    making the streets safer. Vincent was one of Pagan's most vocal
    supporters. There were even some people from the fetish world, still
    another interest of Vincent's.

    "Steven was my escort to many an event," said one women wearing
    tight, black latex and tall high heels, after the service.

    When he was writing for the East Villager, helping Pagan and serving
    briefly as a member of Community Board 3, Vincent had famously
    sparred - once again, in words - with the East Village squatters and
    anarchists over Tompkins Square Park, the homeless, the squats and
    quality of life.

    Last Monday morning, a police detail was posted in front of the
    church. An officer said they were there not exactly at the request of
    Ramaci, but that she had made a phone call, since there were "some
    people that didn't like" Vincent that she didn't want to disrupt
    things. But there were no disruptions.

    Vincent was buried in Greenwood Cemetery in Brooklyn. His friends and
    Ramaci plan to plant a tree for him and buy one of the paving stones
    that are being used to raise funds for the park to be engraved for
    him in Tompkins Square Park.
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