The Hamilton Spectator

‘This epidemic should have stopped with us,’ Columbine survivor tells student protesters

- MARISSA J. LANG

WASHINGTON — Salli Garrigan was in music class when the sound of bullets reverberat­ed through the halls of her high school.

She ran. Out of class, down the stairs, past the shattered front doors of Columbine High. She survived. But 12 of her classmates did not.

Garrigan, now 35 and an Arlington, Va., resident, stood Friday before a crowd of D.C.-area students gathered on the U.S. Capitol lawn and told them when she was their age, she didn’t know how to make her voice heard.

She didn’t know if her perspectiv­e as a school shooting survivor would matter to anyone.

“I hoped it would never happen again, but here we are 19 years later, and it has happened again and again and again,” Garrigan said. “But for the first time, I feel hope because these students are using a voice I didn’t know I had two decades ago.”

Garrigan, mother of a three-year-old and pregnant with her second child, joined Everytown for Gun Safety’s network of gun-violence survivors last year. Everytown was founded by Michael Bloomberg, the former New York mayor. Garrigan said it was the first time she had spoken about her experience with other survivors of similar trauma.

In her speech Friday, she cautioned the assembled students that victims of school shootings carry wounds the rest of their lives.

Her former classmates suffer from survivors’ guilt, post-traumatic stress disorder, substance abuse, suicidal thoughts and more.

“This epidemic should have stopped with us,” she said.

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