Orlando Sentinel

Black women seek leg up on safety in arms

‘We need to learn how to defend ourselves,’ is mantra

- By Lisa Marie Pane

LAWRENCEVI­LLE, Ga. — Sitting in a classroom above a gun range, a woman hesitantly says she isn’t sure she could ever shoot and kill someone, even to protect herself. Couldn’t she just aim for their leg and try to maim them?

Her instructor says selfdefens­e is not about killing someone, but is instead about eliminatin­g a threat.

If the gun gets taken away by a bad guy, the instructor says, “I promise you they’re not going to be having any sympathy or going through the thought process you are.”

Gently she adds that if the student isn’t comfortabl­e with the lethal potential of the gun, buying one might not be for her.

Marchelle Tigner is on a mission: to train at least 1 million women how to shoot a firearm. She had spent no time around guns before joining the National Guard. Now, as a survivor of domestic violence and sexual assault, she wants to give other women of color the training she hadn’t had.

“It’s important, especially for black women, to learn how to shoot,” Tigner said, noting that black women are more likely to be victims of domestic violence. “We need to learn how to defend ourselves.”

It’s hard to find definitive statistics on gun ownership, but a study by the Pew Research Center released this month indicated that just 16 percent of “nonwhite women” identified themselves as gun owners, compared with about 25 percent of white women. Other Pew surveys in recent years have shown a growing acceptance of firearms among African-Americans: In 2012, one found that less than a third of black households viewed gun ownership as positive; three years later, that number had jumped. By then, 59 percent of black families saw owning guns as a necessity.

A recent study by gunrights advocate and researcher John Lott showed that black women outpaced other races and genders in securing concealed carry permits from 2000 to 2016 in Texas, one of the few states that keep detailed demographi­c informatio­n.

Philip Smith founded the National African American Gun Associatio­n in 2012 during Black History Month to spread the word that gun ownership was not something reserved for whites. He figured it would ultimately attract about 300 members, a number achieved in its first month. It now boasts 20,000 members in 30 chapters across the country.

 ?? LISA MARIE PANE/AP ?? Firearms instructor Marchelle Tigner teaches a student how to fire a handgun during a class in an Atlanta suburb.
LISA MARIE PANE/AP Firearms instructor Marchelle Tigner teaches a student how to fire a handgun during a class in an Atlanta suburb.

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