The Nation - April 30, 2018

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
April 30/May 7, 2018 The Nation.^11

use attack dogs and fire hoses to disperse the crowds. (The
water pressure was so great that it not only tore clothing
and flesh, but dislodged bricks from nearby buildings.)
The brutality captured in news footage from that day
endures as the symbol of repressive racial separatism in a
city whose nickname—“Bombingham”—stemmed from
the frequency with which black homes and churches were
bombed by white vigilantes.
Journalist Charlayne Hunter-Gault, who spent her
own youth on the front lines of the civil-rights movement,
has written poignantly of the four young girls who died in
the 1963 bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in
Birmingham and of the “wounds that are less visible and
harder to reconcile.” She writes that bombing survivor
Sarah Collins Rudolph, whose sister Addie Mae was killed,
and who lost one of her eyes in the blast, “is seeking finan-
cial compensation for the extensive medical expenses she

incurred after the attack. After suffering the consequences
for the past five decades, she said, even after all these years,
nobody remembers her.”
González, Hogg, Naomi Wadler, and the other speak-
ers at the March for Our Lives are the most memorable of
the young people affected by our scourge of gun death. But
more than 187,000 students have been exposed to school
shootings since Columbine in April 1999. Many remain in
various degrees of physical or mental pain; they are a popu-
lation whose remaining years will be etched with the stress-
es of catastrophe. And while many of the young leaders of
this new movement are smart, strong, and media-savvy,
we should never forget the toll taken on their lives—not
only with regard to the unspeakable trauma they’ve already
endured, but in the reiteratively staged depravity that sics
hungry dogs upon those who kneel to pray, codes cruelty
as freedom, and takes decency for weakness. Q

While many of
these young
leaders are
smart, strong,
and media-
savvy, we should
never forget the
terrible toll taken
on their lives.

Calvin Trillin


Deadline Poet


REUTERS


Suicide Figures


SNAPSHOT / HANNAH MCKAY

As part of an installation by Mark Jenkins, 84
sculpted figures loom at the edge of rooftops in
London. The project is meant to raise awareness of
male suicide rates in the United Kingdom, where, on
average, 84 men kill themselves every week.

Laura Ingraham Picks On
Parkland High-School Student

Perhaps she’s now embraced the cause
Of feminism fully—
Confirming you don’t have to be
A male to be a bully.
Free download pdf