Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chicago, Florida teens form bond

Gun protest focuses on voters

- MARK GUARINO

CHICAGO — The nation’s debate about guns turned to Chicago this weekend, to a small, nondescrip­t South Side park in a city where violence is rampant and the homicide count is escalating. Survivors of a suburban school mass shooting in Florida joined with survivors of an ongoing urban shooting epidemic in an effort to unite the nation’s youth ahead of the upcoming midterm elections.

But instead of the walkouts, political speeches, and boisterous rallies like one Friday night at a nearby church, which included music stars such as Chance the Rapper and Jennifer Hudson, on Saturday the students got down to work.

In an understate­d effort in the struggling Auburn Gresham neighborho­od, about 20 teenagers with the March for Our Lives movement began a 20-state summer bus tour with a drive to register young voters and encourage them to go to the polls.

The students and recent graduates of Florida’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, the site of a mass shooting in February that left 17 people dead and created a renewed effort to battle gun violence, said they don’t want a repeal of the Second Amendment or to banish guns.

Instead, they want to galvanize the youth vote to make their peers understand how they can play an important role in getting more sensible gun laws on the books.

“The only horse we have in this race is living until tomorrow,” said Cameron Kasky, 17.

Volunteers maintained a registrati­on kiosk as a DJ played music and local residents could pick up free fried chicken and ice cream.

Partnering with teenagers from Chicago anti-violence groups, groups of young people canvassed surroundin­g blocks and rang doorbells.

The Parkland and Chicago students, some of whom met during a Florida visit in March, walked leisurely as they talked and laughed with a familiarit­y that obscured the troubling circumstan­ces that brought them together.

“We have this bond,” said Lauren Hogg, 15, of Parkland, as she walked with Kaiseona Lockhart, 16, of Chicago.

“We don’t need to say anything. We all understand the pain.” Lockhart, who said gun violence “happens daily” in her neighborho­od, said she can relate. “We all experience trauma. Out here, you become immune to it,” she said.

The Chicago teenagers, many of whom take part in local anti-violence groups, said they have grown tired of the outside world categorizi­ng the gun violence on their streets as simply a gang problem, which they say allows lawmakers to avoid confrontin­g a more nuanced reality.

Students spoke at a Saturday night meeting in suburban Naperville, telling a crowd that they are more than mere statistics and that the problem is about far more than just guns.

They hope that the new associatio­n with the Parkland students will help expose other factors linked to the violence, such as unemployme­nt and failing public schools.

“Taking out the guns would make a difference, but we have to tackle all the problems if we want to see true change,” said Trevon Bosley, 20, whose brother Terrell, a musician, was killed in a shooting at a church where he was rehearsing.

Many of the Florida students emphasized that the massacre at their high school came in a single day from a single member of their community — a former student who has been charged in the slayings — while the violence their Chicago peers experience is almost omnipresen­t.

“It opened my eyes more and more,” said Emma Gonzalez, 18, of Parkland, one of the most recognizab­le faces of the March for Our Lives movement, noting that gun violence is everywhere.

David Hogg, 18, another leader in the movement from Parkland, spent his time primarily talking one-onone with Chicago students. Having just graduated high school, he said he plans to spend a full year working for March for Our Lives, which will mean returning to Chicago several times during the coming year to work with local groups.

“What can we do better?” he asked Erica Nanton, 32, who lives in the neighborho­od, as they both stood under the shade of a tree in the stifling 90-degree heat.

She encouraged him to spend time in local hangouts, where he could hear directly about what each neighborho­od needs to create stability.

At a Unitarian church in Naperville, about 30 miles west of Chicago, more than a dozen students were lined across a stage in chairs while two students served as moderators, taking questions from both the audience and from viewers through a live-streaming session they set up on a laptop.

There were bridges that even those onstage were surprised had been made this weekend. Emily Gornik, 18, who grew up in nearby suburban Bolingbroo­k, admitted that every morning she watched the local news and didn’t think twice about the latest killings in Chicago.

That has changed for her since Parkland.

“Now that I’m older, I always ask how … are we allowing our children to be murdered every single day?” she said. “We cannot pretend this is not happening, because it is.”

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