Date: Fri 14-May-1999
Date: Fri 14-May-1999
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
edink-Columbine-commemoration
Full Text:
ED INK: The Value Of Going Through The Motions
Who is to say why some tragic stories stick with us while others come and go,
swept in and out of our consciousness on the tide of television news? In terms
of sheer carnage, the slaying of high school students in Littleton, Colorado
pales in comparison with what's going on in Kosovo, or what has happened in
recent years in Rwanda, or 20 years ago in Cambodia and Laos. But the kids who
died in Columbine High School were remarkably like our own sons, daughters,
sisters, and brothers. We know intellectually that every killing is tragic,
but our emotional connection to victims who we seem to know makes the
Columbine killings different. Consequently, the healing takes a little longer.
To help in that process locally, Newtown youths, their parents, teachers, and
clergy are making plans for a week-long program of activities at the beginning
of June, commemorating the lives that were lost at Columbine. Initial planning
calls for a candlelight vigil June 1 at Bruce Jenner Stadium at Newtown High
School, planting a commemorative tree, and forging a townwide covenant
affirming tolerance, understanding, and acceptance of all people.
There will be a great temptation to view these efforts to draw meaning from
the Columbine tragedy in a cynical light. Have our sentimental rituals of
remembrance ever made a difference? How many times, after all, have we been
stunned and then moved by current events to light a candle in a crowd, to pin
a ribbon to our lapels, and to remember that all life is dear only to return
to our old habit of forgetting every injury that is not our own -- even those
we inflict on others without thinking?
The parents of today's high school students, who came of age themselves in the
'60s and '70s, know that youthful hope for a better world can yield more
disillusionment than enlightenment. But in times like these, when the world
cries out for hope, it is important to guard against cynicism and
disillusionment. As the art historian Kenneth Clark pointed out, "We can
destroy ourselves by cynicism and disillusion, just as effectively as by
bombs."
So even as we wonder about the value of lighting candles, wearing ribbons, and
planting trees, it is important for us to go through the motions of
commemoration as a community. In itself, each ritual may have little bearing
on the course of the world, but it reawakens each of us to the cause of
creating a better reality for ourselves and others through small, positive
actions and thoughts. If enough people repeat them often enough, change is not
only possible -- it is inevitable.