Nashville Shooting Sparks Gun Control Debate in Tennessee Legislature
As the Tennessee Legislature gaveled into session on April 17—with discussion of arming teachers on the agenda—a mother whose son attends The Covenant School, where three children and three staff members were murdered in a shooting on March 27, gave a harrowing account of how the tragedy affected her and her children.
“The last three weeks have been deeply painful. Our days are spent hearing children as young as 3 years old describe in horrific detail what they saw and heard,” said Sarah Neumann, holding back tears. “Third graders saw the dead bodies of their friends, not just coffins—their classmates. They sat in those rooms, shielded by their teachers, with bullets flying over them.”
Neumann’s 5-year-old son, Noah, attends The Covenant School, and also has a 2-year-old.
“I texted our preschool moms thread ‘active shooter at Covenant,’” she said. “I could barely type the words, my body was shaking. At that moment, that innocent moms text thread was forever changed from a place that we shared pictures and reminded each other of dress up days, to now coping through trauma and things parents should never have to discuss.”
Soon after, she met up with her family at a reunification site at a nearby church to be with the Covenant community.
“My dad drove an hour to get the kids so they wouldn’t witness any more agony, but not before the first mom was told her kid was gone,” she said. “Those screams and sorrowing wails—I worked in pediatric oncology for 13 years, I held kids in my arms as they died way too many times—nothing compared to the scream of that mom.”
She said she walked in the school the other day and saw the bullet holes and the spots where the bodies of the students and staff members had lain. She said classrooms looked like they were frozen in time, with March 27 still written on the boards.
Gun Control Activists
The march where Neumann spoke on April 17 was a part of “Moral Monday,” a political demonstration in which protesters took to the streets of Nashville to call upon the state Legislature to ban “assault weapons” in Tennessee and to vote against legislation to arm teachers.
Scores of people participated in Nashville’s “Moral Monday,” a political demonstration that first started in North Carolina a decade ago by Bishop William Barber II. Nashville’s event included marchers carrying adult and children’s caskets to the state Capitol, speeches outside of the Capitol, and eventually some entering the Capitol.
Those caskets were not allowed by Tennessee State Troopers into the Capitol.
Rep. Justin Jones, one of two Democrats expelled from the House for causing disorder while calling for gun control days after the shooting, brought the smallest casket into the capitol and attempted to bring it into the House chamber as it was already in session.
“I was just trying to get back into the chamber with a child’s casket to represent the policies of this body and we were locked out,” he said.
Jones said the clergy came in the “thousands” from across the nation to “give moral witness to what’s happening” in the Tennessee Legislature.
“Thousands of clergy … are here today praying and asking us to do something about these children who are being killed in our streets,” Jones continued. “I hope, Mr. Speaker, that casket that’s sitting out of there will send a clear message about what is happening in this body. We are perpetuating policies of death.”
" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."
Now loading...