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Anonymous

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

Opinion

Act now, don’t wait for tragedies like Sandy Hook

December 28, 2012 09:13
3 min read

The tranquillity of Chanucah was shattered as news began to filter in of the tragic events unfolding at Sandy Hook Elementary School. We learned that 20 children aged six and seven, and six of their teachers and administrators had been murdered. As an Israeli friend put it: "We are a country that is used to being shocked, but this is truly shocking."

At the school at which I am head-teacher, we held assemblies honouring our teacher-heroes during Chanucah, one for each day. I have been imagining a similar assembly in another school, perhaps with a Christmas tree where the chanuciah was placed. I am picturing Richie Wilford coming to the microphone to make his speech. These are the words that he may have said.

"I would like to honour my teacher who smiles every day and who treats all of us as if we are her children. I would like to invite Ms Vicki Soto to help me turn on the lights of the tree. But I can't, because our teacher died trying to protect us. She put seven of us into a closet and, when a bad man came in, she told him we had gone to a PE class. But he killed our teacher and some of our classmates, and then left the room. When the good guys came, they found us still waiting in the closet, still waiting for our hero teacher to open the door and tell us it was safe to leave. We are still waiting. We will always wait."

There is no possible reason I can think of that would explain these murders. So let me talk about a few things that perhaps we can do, not to erase the memories of these young children, but to perpetuate them.