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Post Reports

What it’s like to survive a school shooting

Post Reports

The Washington Post

Daily News, Politics, News

4.45.1K Ratings

🗓️ 9 December 2022

⏱️ 35 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A decade after the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School, the story of a 10-year-old girl who survived the shooting at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, Tex. — and how she has become a voice for the friends she lost that day.


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After a school shooting, we often hear numbers — how many children and teachers were killed or injured. But for the survivors and their families, the trauma can be overwhelming. 


“I think the scope of this crisis is so much larger than people are willing to acknowledge,” reporter John Woodrow Cox says. “It's not just the kids who died. It's not just kids who got shot. It's not just the kids like Caitlyne who listen to the whole thing happen and lost dear friends. It's third-graders, it's teachers and their kids. It's cousins. It's people in the community who thought, ‘Is my kid dead?’ That damage cannot be undone.”


With the permission of Caitlyne Gonzales and her parents, John spent the summer with the 10-year-old school shooting survivor, following her as she went to karate and guitar lessons, rallies for gun reform in Texas and Washington, school board meetings and back to school. He was also there with her family in the evenings, when Caitlyne’s trauma was the most apparent and she struggled to go to sleep without her mom. Caitlyne and her parents wanted people to see that while on the outside she might look like a composed activist, she’s still dealing with an enormous amount of trauma.


John has been reporting on children and gun violence for more than five years and is the author of an award-winning book on the subject, “Children Under Fire: An American Crisis.”

Transcript

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0:00.0

The 24th started up as a joyful day and it was quickly overshadowed by the tragic events

0:11.6

that followed that day.

0:13.2

That's Caitlin Gonzales.

0:15.2

Here she's just 10 years old, speaking at a gun safety rally in Uvalde, Texas, just

0:21.6

up the road from Rob Elementary School, her elementary school.

0:27.0

In May 24th, an 18-year-old walked into her school with an AR-15 and killed two teachers

0:34.1

and 19 of her classmates, including her best friend.

0:38.2

Since Uvalde, there have been hundreds of mass shootings.

1:02.9

And according to the post-school shooting database, more than a dozen shootings or acts

1:08.2

of gun violence have happened in school since May.

1:12.3

After a school shooting, we often talk about how many kids were killed, how many were injured.

1:19.3

But there are also kids left behind who are physically fine but traumatized.

1:26.0

Kids like Caitlin.

1:27.8

For her, she responded to this trauma by becoming an advocate.

1:32.7

She is different, really, than anyone I've ever met before.

1:36.8

In part, because she was so determined to keep the memory of her friends alive, to share

1:43.7

her own trauma, she wanted something to come out of this that was meaningful and that's

1:50.8

rare for a 10-year-old.

1:52.2

She really understood and educated herself on the wider world of school shootings and

1:59.8

gun violence and was very intentional and thoughtful in the way that she fought for change.

2:14.2

John Woodrow Cox reports on gun violence in America and he spent months with Caitlin

2:19.3

in Uvalde this summer.

...

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