The Mercury News

School’s students doing its namesake very proud

- By Esther J. Cepeda Esther Cepeda is a Washington Post columnist.

It would, no doubt, repulse Marjory Stoneman Douglas to know that an unthinkabl­e shooting at a high school bearing her moniker has sullied her good name.

But we can’t let that horror recast such a remarkable woman’s legacy.

Marjory Stoneman was born in 1890 to an entreprene­ur father and a concert-violinist mother. She attended Wellesley College, where she majored in English, became involved in the women’s suffrage movement and graduated in 1912.

After graduating (and marrying, thus adding on the “Douglas”), Stoneman Douglas, at 25, started writing for The Herald, the newspaper which would eventually become the Miami Herald, where her father had become the publisher.

She served in the American Red Cross in France, Belgium, Italy and the Balkans during World War I. Upon her return, Stoneman Douglas divorced the husband and began editing at The Herald, then writing editorials and eventually editing a literary column called “The Galley.”

Another bit of context: Given journalism’s current terrible state of gender equity in the leadership of newsrooms and opinion sections, this would be impressive even today.

Stoneman Douglas amassed countless honors for her short stories, novels, a play, nonfiction books and articles on the conservati­on of the Florida Everglades and other natural habitats.

In a 1952 review of her book “Road to the Sun,” the New York Times critic Frank G. Slaughter said, “Marjory Stoneman Douglas knows South Florida and the Everglades intimately. … Her genius, however, goes much deeper than the ability to evoke a particular setting. Her descriptio­n of a region that is neither earth nor water will give the reader a sense of having visited the ’Glades in person.”

Stoneman Douglas also helped pass a state constituti­onal amendment to hold polluters accountabl­e for cleaning up the Everglades. She also eventually helped secure multimilli­on-dollar state and federal grants to restore and expand the Everglades. These efforts earned her the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom in 1993.

When Stoneman Douglas died in 1998 at the age of 108, a longtime leader of the Florida chapter of the Sierra Club told The New York Times: ”The Everglades wouldn’t be there for us to try to continue to save if not for her work through the years.”

Stoneman Douglas would surely be impressed by the passionate advocacy of young leaders who traveled to Florida’s state capital to rally for gun control legislatio­n. This includes the galvanizin­g spokespeop­le like Emma Gonzalez, the Parkland student whose emotional “BS call” captured the hearts of social media activists.

I’m taking the next quote far, far out of context, because a future in which children slaughtere­d other children in an institute of learning would have been inconceiva­ble to Stoneman Douglas.

But I think this line from her delightful, slightly crotchety and very “straight talk” autobiogra­phy, “Voice of the River,” will energize those facing the long, uphill battle to prevent future school shootings against the pushback of those who say it’s too early to politicize a tragedy:

“Some people don’t realize there are inevitable wars that just have to be fought. Pacifism isn’t always noble, and it isn’t always intelligen­t,” she wrote. “You have to stand up for some things in this world.”

It’s very easy to imagine that our country will lose interest in the topic of school shootings until the next one occurs, because this has been the pattern.

But maybe the students of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School will channel their patron saint’s energy and tenacity as a force for making big, important things happen.

 ?? RHONA WISE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School student Emma Gonzalez’s emotional “BS call” has galvanized people across the country.
RHONA WISE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School student Emma Gonzalez’s emotional “BS call” has galvanized people across the country.

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