Chicago Sun-Times

Englewood Montessori students say ‘ enough’ to gun violence through art

- BY ALEXANDRA ARRIAGA, STAFF REPORTER aarriaga@ suntimes. com | @ alexarriag­a__

This month, the principal of Chicago Public Schools’ Montessori School of Englewood Charter canceled outdoor recess. There was a shooting early in the day in the neighborho­od, and as a cautionary measure, recess was inside.

It wasn’t unusual for the students or their teachers.

“There are days when we can’t come outside and enjoy a day like today because we hear gunshots,” said Maria Barksdale, a seventhand eighth- grade teacher at the school.

There’s good reason for caution when it comes to gun violence breaking out around schools: In the past five years, 11 Chicago schools have been hit by gunshots, though no one was injured in those incidents, a recent Chicago Sun- Times investigat­ion found. Last year, two teens and an 18- year- old man were charged with shooting two girls at an endofyear school picnic at Warren Elementary School in the Calumet Heights neighborho­od on the South Side.

But last Wednesday, the students at the Montessori school staged a showof force. They stepped out as part of the “291 Sidewalk Challenge” and wrote the names of the 291 schools that have suffered gun violence since the mass school shooting in December 2012 at Sandy Hook Elementary in Connecticu­t.

After they did so, another name would need to be added to the list: Santa Fe High School near Houston, where 10 fatalities from a mass shooting Friday were reported.

“Itwas important that our kids have a chance to also be activists, not always be treated as a victim,” the school’s principal, Rita Nolan said. “And they knew Sandy Hook, they knew Parkland; we didn’t prep the kids in anyway. They’re very aware and showempath­y.”

The students got all the names down in chalk, but they couldn’t complete in one day the task of covering them in red paint, which Barksdale said speaks “volumes.”

Barksdale said it’s important for students, who regularly feel the impact of gun violence, to see themselves as more than hopeless victims and be activists.

The art project was part of an ongoing “Schools Say Enough” initiative by GCE Laboratory School. It asks communitie­s to write names of the schools that have been impacted by gun violence since 2012 using supplies like chalk, fabric, paper and yarn.

“I think our kids enjoyed it, they like to see that they can make change in the world,” Debbie Kelley, elementary director at the school, said.

In April, students involved with GCE Lab, a North Side private high school, created displays of public protest at Chicago’s Washington Square Park but were later removed after a pro- gun group petitioned to create a counter demonstrat­ion. The initiative has moved to other locations such as schools and parks, according to a GCE petition.

 ?? MAXHERMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? Montessori School of Englewood students last week paint the name of one of the 291 schools across the country that has been affected by gun violence since the Sandy Hook shooting in 2012.
MAXHERMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES Montessori School of Englewood students last week paint the name of one of the 291 schools across the country that has been affected by gun violence since the Sandy Hook shooting in 2012.

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