Miami Herald

10 years after Sandy Hook shooting, parents wonder what could have been

- BY DAVE COLLINS

They would have been 16 or 17 this year. High-school juniors.

The children killed at the Sandy Hook Elementary School on Dec. 14, 2012 should have spent this year thinking about college, taking their SATs and getting their driver’s licenses. Maybe attending their first prom.

Instead, the families of the 20 students and six educators slain in the mass shooting will mark a decade without them Wednesday.

December is a difficult month for many in Newtown, the Connecticu­t suburb where holiday season joy is tempered by heartbreak around the anniversar­y of the nation’s worst grade-school shooting.

For the students who survived the massacre, guilt and anxiety can intensify. For the parents, it can mean renewed grief, even as they continue to fight on their lost children’s behalf.

In February, Sandy Hook families reached a $73 million settlement with the gunmaker Remington, which made the shooter’s rifle. Juries in Connecticu­t and Texas ordered the conspiracy theorist Alex Jones to pay $1.4 billion for promoting lies that the massacre was a hoax.

In mid-November, a memorial to the 26 victims opened near the new elementary school that was built to replace the one torn down after the shooting.

Ten years on, some victims’ relatives and survivors have hope for a brighter future.

ACTIVISM

After the massacre, Nicole Hockley and Mark Barden were among many victims’ relatives who turned to activism. They helped form Sandy Hook Promise, a nonprofit group that works to prevent suicides and mass shootings.

Hockley, who lost her 6-year-old son, Dylan, and Barden, who lost his 7-yearold son, Daniel, both find it difficult to believe their children have been gone for a decade.

“For me, Dylan is still this 6-year-old boy, forever frozen in time,” Hockley said. “This journey that we’ve been on the last 10 years, it doesn’t feel like a decade and it doesn’t feel like 10 years since I last held my son, either.”

A decade hasn’t diminished the disbelief that Barden and his wife feel over Daniel’s death.

“Jackie and I still have moments where we just

kind of look at each other, still wrapping our heads around the fact that our little 7-year-old boy was shot to death in his firstgrade classroom,” he said.

“I can’t help but wonder what he’d be like now at 17,” he said, repeating the number 17.

“I just think he would be still a more mature version of the beautiful, sweet, compassion­ate, thoughtful, intelligen­t little boy that he was at 7. And it breaks my heart to think of the wonderful impact he would have had in these last 10 years and what he would have still yet to come, and it’s all been taken away from him.”

Sandy Hook Promise’s programs have been taught in more than 23,000 schools to over 18 million children and adults. Key components include education about the warning signs of potential school violence or self-harm and an anonymous tip system to report a classmate at risk for hurting others or themselves.

Hockley and Barden say they believe the educationa­l programs and reporting system have prevented many suicides and stopped some school shootings.

“It’s a tremendous satisfacti­on, and it’s a serious responsibi­lity,” Barden said of the group’s work. “And it’s a gift in a way that we have built something that allows us this mechanism with which to honor our children by saving other children and by protecting other families from having to endure this pain.”

SURVIVOR

Ashley Hubner was in her second-grade classroom at Sandy Hook Elementary when the shooting happened. She and her classmates ran to the cubby area to hide. The school intercom system clicked on. Everyone could hear gunshots, screaming and crying.

When police arrived, she and her classmates didn’t want to open the door.

They thought bad guys could be impersonat­ing officers. They screamed “No!” The officers had to convince them they were police.

Ashley, now a 17-year-old senior at Newtown High School, developed posttrauma­tic stress disorder and has struggled with anxiety and depression. Some of her fellow students have the same conditions. Ashley said she always gets more emotional and irritable around the shooting anniversar­y.

“Even though it’s been 10 years, like this is still a problem that a lot of us still have to handle in our everyday lives and it still affects us greatly,” she said.

Adding to the grief is that mass shootings keep happening, she said.

“We’ve had 10 years to change things and we’ve changed so little, and that’s just disgusting to me,” she said.

She said she has been happy with her senior year at Newtown High and is looking forward to going to college.

“I’m really, really excited to leave,” she said. “Just like to get new experience­s, grow up and move on with this chapter of my life, you know?”

St. Rose of Lima Church

has been a gathering point for the Newtown community since the day of the shooting, when hundreds of people packed the Roman Catholic church and stood outside for a vigil. It has held a special Mass every Dec. 14 since.

Monsignor Robert Weiss still struggles with his own trauma. The church led the funerals for eight slain children. He hasn’t slept well since and becomes emotional easily. During Mass, he always keeps watch on the entrances, worried about a violent intruder.

“It’s a very difficult time for me having buried eight of those children,” he said of the anniversar­y. “It just brings back so many memories of true sadness.”

The anniversar­y Masses are hopeful, Weiss said, with a theme that light conquers darkness.

“The darkness of evil is not going to conquer good and we as a community have to work together to be sure that happens,” Weiss said.

 ?? JULIA NIKHINSON AP | Dec. 5, 2022 ?? Mark Barden and Nicole Hockley are co-founders of the Sandy Hook Promise Foundation. Barden’s son, Daniel, and Hockley’s son, Dylan, were among the 20 children and six educators who were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
JULIA NIKHINSON AP | Dec. 5, 2022 Mark Barden and Nicole Hockley are co-founders of the Sandy Hook Promise Foundation. Barden’s son, Daniel, and Hockley’s son, Dylan, were among the 20 children and six educators who were killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
 ?? JULIA NIKHINSON AP ?? Dylan Hockley was 6.
JULIA NIKHINSON AP Dylan Hockley was 6.

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