The Commercial Appeal

A painful toll for kids

Death of 10-year-old ‘lit a fire’ in heart of Memphis teacher

- Laura Testino

When Jadon Knox worked on school assignment­s, he thought about his siblings. He picked a color for each of them in a painting exercise, former teacher Earl Wilson recalled.

The 10-year-old was fatally shot in Orange Mound over the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday weekend. Two other children were shot in Hickory Hill and remain in extremely critical condition, Memphis Police Department said.

“Jadon kept a smile” in class, Wilson said.

Knox is the first student Wilson has lost to gun violence. In a Facebook post about Knox, Wilson said he awarded him the “Koolaid smile award” because he could make anyone smile.

The student’s death is tragic for the family and a chilling reminder for kids and parents across the city, board member Joyce Dorse-coleman said.

The firearm homicide rate for children in Tennessee is one of the highest

in the nation: these kinds of deaths are most highly concentrat­ed across 16 states, including 7 states in the south, according to a study published in Pediatrics journal in 2019.

Across age groups, the Tennessee’s firearm mortality rate is ranked 11th in the country, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data shows.

The problem is well-known to Wilson, a South Memphis native who, while a student himself, watched former teachers lose his classmates to gun violence. Knox’s death has made the unfortunat­e possibilit­y a reality, he said. Hearing about the death of his former student felt like he’d lost his own son.

“This tragic loss has lit a fire in my heart,” he said in an email, “a good fire.”

More condolence­s than congratula­tions

Children shouldn’t live with the fear that their fellow classmates may not make it back to school after the weekend break, Dorse-coleman, the Shelby County Schools board member, said Tuesday.

“Our children deserve so much more,” she said. “They deserve better.”

The loss of children to gun violence is both tragic and senseless, said Dorse-coleman, whose district includes Orange Mound. She said she offered the district’s assistance to Knox’s school, Aspire Hanley Elementary, which is a charter school in the Orange Mound neighborho­od and part of the state-run Achievemen­t School District.

“We’re offering condolence­s more than we’re offering congratula­tions now,” she said.

Guns are not the answer, Dorsecolem­an said, encouragin­g anyone who knows about the suspect to speak up. Preliminar­y suspect informatio­n provided by police indicates the suspect fled the Orange Mound shooting scene in a vehicle described as either a white Nissan Altima with a black front bumper or a white Infiniti with a black front bumper.

Dorse-coleman noted that the presence and threat of violence and crime in Orange Mound affects teacher recruitmen­t, with some educators turning down opportunit­ies to teach in communitie­s with higher rates of violence. Parents also may choose a different school for their children because of safety concerns, she said.

“So nobody is winning,” she said. In 2017, the Orange Mound school Knox attended this year was one of the lowest-performing in the state. In the 38114 area code of Memphis at that time, 62% of children lived below the poverty level, and the median household income was $21,599.

Wilson taught Knox, a fourth-grader this year, during his second and thirdgrade years at Aspire Hanley, Knox wanted to be around you if he trusted you, said Wilson, who is now a teacher at another school.

In the Facebook post, Wilson said that after he gave Knox the smile award, “his face glowed” and Knox began to trust him more.

“He would always walk behind my desk to ‘tell me a secret,’ ” Wilson said. “I knew he did not have a secret, but I let him cling.”

Here to help, here to stay

Memphis has to do better for its youth, Wilson said, “from the ones in the school to the ones on the streets.”

In a statement about the violence over the weekend, Mayor Jim Strickland described losing children to gun violence as unconscion­able.

“Reducing violent crime and keeping people safe has been and remains our number one priority,” Strickland said, noting efforts to recruit and retain police officers and bring “good-paying jobs” to the city.

The study in Pediatrics shows that firearm-related deaths are the third leading cause of death for children.

When looking at the intersecti­on of poverty and violence, recruiting more police officers and better-paying jobs are one of many improvemen­ts to be made, Strickland said.

Strickland also noted raising early childhood literacy rates, historical­ly low in Shelby County Schools and the subject of one of the district’s main initiative­s. Strickland also noted stricter sentences for violent criminals and said the availabili­ty of guns is “too easy.”

The Pediatrics study stressed that firearm violence is not an isolated crime, and suggested that it not be treated as such when developing interventi­ons.

According to the study: “It is also important to address poverty and the other contextual factors that mediate and moderate the risk for these forms of violence.”

Suggested violence reduction strategies include: Outreach programs that reduce gun and gang-related violence, early childhood education, schoolbase­d programs and therapeuti­c approaches.

“I work every day to change the life of those in my city, but I am only one person,” Wilson said. “I love Memphis. I am here to help, and I am here to stay.”

Commercial Appeal reporters Micaela A. Watts and Samuel Hardiman contribute­d to this story.

“He would always walk behind my desk to ‘tell me a secret.’ I knew he did not have a secret, but I let him cling.”

Earl Wilson Former teacher of Jadon Knox

 ?? MAX GERSH / THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Stuffed animals are leaned against a utility pole Tuesday across the street from the scene of a shooting in the 700 block of Josephine Street in Memphis.
MAX GERSH / THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Stuffed animals are leaned against a utility pole Tuesday across the street from the scene of a shooting in the 700 block of Josephine Street in Memphis.
 ?? EARL WILSON ?? Aspire Henley Elementary School teacher Earl Wilson looks over papers with student Jadon Knox.
EARL WILSON Aspire Henley Elementary School teacher Earl Wilson looks over papers with student Jadon Knox.
 ?? COURTESY OF EARL WILSON ?? Jadon Knox holds up artwork with the letter “J” illustrate­d on it at Aspire Hanley Elementary School.
COURTESY OF EARL WILSON Jadon Knox holds up artwork with the letter “J” illustrate­d on it at Aspire Hanley Elementary School.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States