Standing up for what is important
It was at the end of our school day yesterday when one of my students matter-of-factly asked if I had heard about "the shooting". Knowing about the violent incident this past weekend on a street near my elementary school, I waited for her to continue. Which she did. As if it weren't something out of the ordinary, this 8-year-old described how her mother brought my students and her sibling to an upstairs bedroom where they would be safe from further gunfire. And this revelation led another student to share that he lived on the next street and also heard gunshots.Can I just be on the record that no 8-year-old should have to deal with this?A few years ago, one of my students was nearly hit when a stray bullet went through the front window of her family's apartment on the same street. When I asked what she did next, she told me she just got on the floor. Simple as that as if a bullet going through the front window was not that unusual.So yesterday, when I heard about a walk, a community response event sponsored by several city neighborhood groups and UTEC (United Teen Equality Center), I felt the need to walk in support of my students, many of whom are exposed to violence and trauma in ways that are normally quite easy to shut out.As the walkers traveled from City Hall in silence, I realized how easy it is to detach from the violence my own students deal with. This simple act, made it real - as one speaker said, tonight we would not be driving by, we would stop and reflect on the recent city violence.I don't have many answers for my students; they live in an environment that I, a product of white, middle-class upbringing, can hardly begin to imagine.Eight-year-old or eighty-eight years old, violence is never an answer. Walking with those whose lives are highly impacted by such events made turning away impossible.