Chattanooga Times Free Press

Vigil held in remembranc­e of Waffle House shooting victims

- BY ROSANA HUGHES STAFF WRITER

Four candles burned at the Renaissanc­e Park pavilion as a group of students held a vigil for the four killed in a deadly shooting at a Nashville Waffle House a week ago.

“Gun violence is so prevalent in this country, that shootings like the one in Antioch didn’t receive the news coverage that it deserved,” said Julia Becker, a freshman at Chattanoog­a Center for Creative Arts. “… We need to start seeing serious change in this country because it is absolutely heartbreak­ing heart breaking

to see things like this happening so often, and change starts with us.”

The group, Chattanoog­a Students Leading Change, formed after the shooting at a Parkland, Fla., high school that left 17 dead in February. The students are some of the leaders behind local student walkouts and the March for Our Lives rally in March. Recently, they traveled to Washington, D.C. to meet with U.S. Sen. Bob Corker, Rep. Chuck Fleischman­n and staffers for U.S. Sen. Lamar Alexander to advocate for stricter gun laws and efforts to combat gun violence.

A fraternity brother of James Shaw, the man who wrestled the gun away from the shooter at the Waffle House last Sunday, spoke at the vigil.

Brandon Woodruff said in the past he has gone to the same fraternity parties as the group of people in the Waffle House that night, and has eaten at Internatio­nal House of Pancakes and Waffle House restaurant­s after those parties and even played on the same fraternal basketball team.

“I could have very well been in that same situation, in that same predicamen­t,” he said. “And for me, I think it really hit home.”

He also drew attention to gun violence that affects some students every day.

“Let’s talk about and have a conversati­on about the gun violence that happens in the inner city,” Woodruff said. “… Our military officials go over seas and they come back with PTSD because of the things they experience­d, but we don’t talk about how some of the kids in the inner city experience some of those overseas experience­s every day.”

He said he thinks a focus on mental health research is needed in order to better address the root of the gun violence problem.

Grace Bostock, a sophomore at Baylor School, said it’s important to know the difference between being an idle consumer of news and being empowered to take action.

“Consumptio­n, you fall into a hole where it’s so easy to think, ‘Well, I can’t; it’s too much,’” she said. “Many times, you’re told, ‘The system’s broken’ … That’s not something we thought, that’s what we were told. And that’s why we’re here again to

“If you tell me, as a legislator, as a representa­tive, that the system is broken, then why are you [in office]?”

— GRACE BOSTOCK, BAYLOR SCHOOL SOPHOMORE

say, ‘Well, that’s not good enough. Fix it.’”

She said the group wants to represent the empowermen­t and motivation that comes after tragedies such as the recent mass shootings. She urged people to not sit back and think that other people will take action.

“It’s not ‘They’re making change,’ it’s going to be ‘We’re making change,’” she said. “If you tell me, as a legislator, as a representa­tive, that the system is broken, then why are you [in office]?”

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Brandon Woodruff speaks during the Vigil for Antioch held Sunday at the Renaissanc­e Park pavilion. Woodruff is friends with James Shaw Jr., who stopped the shooter last week in a Nashville Waffle House.
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH Brandon Woodruff speaks during the Vigil for Antioch held Sunday at the Renaissanc­e Park pavilion. Woodruff is friends with James Shaw Jr., who stopped the shooter last week in a Nashville Waffle House.
 ??  ??
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Mason Thomas lights candles for Trey Lydon, Anika Iqbal and Bruce Stewart during a vigil Sunday at the Renaissanc­e Park pavilion. The vigil was held by Chattanoog­a Students Leading Change to remember the four victims killed in the shooting at a Waffle...
STAFF PHOTO BY ERIN O. SMITH Mason Thomas lights candles for Trey Lydon, Anika Iqbal and Bruce Stewart during a vigil Sunday at the Renaissanc­e Park pavilion. The vigil was held by Chattanoog­a Students Leading Change to remember the four victims killed in the shooting at a Waffle...

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