Parkland students launch #StoriesUntold to amplify overlooked voices in the gun debate
At an Axios-hosted discussion on guns one day before the historic March for Our Lives in Washington, D.C., student activist David Hogg was asked a simple question: What did the media miss while covering the deadly shooting at his high school in Parkland, Fla., on Feb. 14?
Hogg, a 17-year-old senior from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, who by then had appeared at least a dozen times on TV, offered a pointed reply: “Not giving black students a voice.”
His call to action inspired media organizations to reflect on their own coverage and spurred some, like CNN, to make up for lost time. But for those who feel routinely left out of discussions on gun violence, a few news stories aren’t enough to remedy the problem.
So, in interest of continuing to amplify voices of color and others left out of the conversation, Stoneman Douglas student Carlitos Rodriguez launched a new movement, giving it a name that encapsulates its mission: #StoriesUntold.
The platform, consisting of both a Twitter page and hashtag, launched on April 2 with a 42-second video in which Rodriguez appears with other classmates, mentioning things they remember from that tragic day. “My life was changed forever,” one student says. “I saw things that no one should ever have to see,” another adds.
There are unique experiences yet to be heard from Parkland survivors. The voices from black and brown students are still untold.
RT & Share to hear their stories. All of us together demand: NO MORE GUN VIOLENCE! #NeverAgain #StoriesUntold pic.twitter.com/mq9PZctj4E
— Alyssa Milano (@Alyssa_Milano) April 2, 2018
After a tweet from Alyssa Milano, the movement began to take off, catching the attention of Teen Vogue. As that hashtag began circulating, students began sharing #StoriesUntold on the page, some from students present at the shooting in Parkland, some from entirely different tragedies.
One retweet tells the story of Jamahri Sydnor, a teenager shot and killed just days before she was set to start college. Another from a Stoneman Douglas student named Elissa, who looks back on her final moments with Helena Ramsey, a 17-year-old junior who was killed in her classroom.
Her name is Jamahri Sydnor. She was shot and killed in DC days before she was to start her first day of college at @FAMU_1887 after driving through crossfire with her little cousin in the car. Her life mattered, and her story matters. #StoriesUntold pic.twitter.com/iupFaJb9M7
— Omari R. Allen (@OmariRAllen) April 2, 2018
On Wednesday, the platform announced it would soon be ready to share a story that the whole nation has been waiting to hear — that of Anthony Borges, the Stoneman Douglas student who endured five bullet wounds while shielding 20 classmates from the shooter.
Initially in critical condition, Borges was visited by teachers and local police officers throughout his five-week stay in the hospital, some of whom posted pictures during his recovery. The brave 15-year-old was shot three times in the legs, once near his liver, and once in his chest, requiring doctors to remove a third of his lung. After over a month in recovery, he was finally released this week.
The Sheriff was honored to visit Anthony Borges,15, in the hospital. Anthony was shot five times. Fortunately, he is recovering, but has a long road ahead with more surgeries needed. Please join us in praying for the swift recovery of Anthony and all others from #StonemanDouglas. pic.twitter.com/U0PVkEwpFZ
— Broward Sheriff (@browardsheriff) February 18, 2018
In a #StoriesUntold video, one of the first of Borges since the shooting, he appears sitting upright — first in a hospital bed and later at home. “I’m Anthony Borges from Venezula,” he says softly to the camera. “I was face-to-face with Nicolas Cruz, and he shot me five times. … My story deserves to be told.”
After releasing the video, @StoriesUntoldUS posted a GoFundMe for Borges’s family to help cover medical bills; one that — as of publishing — was just $200,000 shy of its $1 million goal. Once Borges recovers, the platform says it plans to release a full video of him discussing the incident.
Until then, the students behind the movement will shine a light on the stories that the media overlooked—including their own.
Read more from Yahoo Lifestyle:
In praise of the awe-inspiring students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas
Teen banned from prom for posting a photo of a gun on social media: ‘I was just sharing what I like’
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