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Columbine
and the Power of Symbols
by
Sam Smith
Sunday, May 2, 1999
It
won't stop raining, and nobody seems to care.
I went to Columbine twice this week. On Wednesday I was simply
overwhelmed - I have never seen anything like the rambling
memorial site that has spread across the grounds of the high
school and the adjacent Clement Park, never imagined
anything like it. There was no sense of scale, of proportion
- there exists no frame of reference with which to make sense
of this deluge of grief. But I feel compelled to try describing
what I saw, the pain, the small expressions of faith for the
future, this physical manifestation of a community's psychic
anguish. So I returned yesterday, Saturday, hoping vainly
for perspective where none appears possible.
As you turn east off Wadsworth and drive down Bowles the park
and school grounds lie to your right. The park features picnic
space and fields for football, lacrosse, soccer, and softball.
Fields for small children to run and play in. Fields to watch
the sun set behind the Front Range of the Rockies just a few
unobstructed miles to the west. Whatever permanent monument
they eventually erect here will never reflect how thoroughly
and ironically public Clement Park has become. We sometimes
lament how our nation has lost all sense of itself as a community,
has forgotten what it is to have a town square, a shared space
that symbolizes the communal spirit.
Well, here it is.
At the west end of the park, beside an athletic field, there's
a small latticework shrine featuring a lacrosse helmet and
two crossed sticks mounted over a bucket of flowers. On one
side there's a small laminated sign with a prayer that reads,
in part, "Dear God, we have been abused and it has wounded
our souls. Our memories and thoughts, Dear Lord, are full
of horror and we are powerless to heal them." The other sign
reads, "When God would educate a mans (sic) and compels
him to learn better lessons he sends him to school to the
necessities rather than the graces that by knowing all suffering
he may know also the eternal consolation."
Just west of the site where Vice President Gore laid a bouquet
last Sunday is a tent dominated by a tribute to Cassie Bernall,
the young woman whom the gunman asked, "Do
you believe in God?"* Flyers with information
about how to contribute to the Cassie Bernall Fund rest on
a table. Notes, posters, and banners offer condolences and
solidarity from Uniontown, Pennsylvania, Marin County, California,
and an elementary school in Wallace, North Carolina.
A major memorial has grown up around the flowers Gore placed,
and a tent has been erected to protect the site from the elements.
Inside lies a carpet of flowers - bouquets, formal arrangements,
loose cuts, potted; a profusion of handmade cards, posters,
placards, most handwritten and decorated, but few displaying
anything like professional art or design skills and none that
I saw were store-bought; a large poster from the people of
Southern Oregon, who last year at Thurston High School came
to know firsthand the pain we in Colorado are now grappling
with; in front of this stands a silver and blue football goalpost
- the crossbar is hung with a mobile featuring strings of
paper angels; several stuffed animals, mostly teddy bears;
balloons - some with sympathy messages, others in bouquets
of blue and white; candles - some plain and some bearing Christian
imagery; a blue baseball cap with a red and white cross; crosses,
and more crosses. These artifacts - flowers, cards, posters,
crosses, and hundreds, if not thousands, of stuffed animals,
mostly teddy bears - make up the bulk of what people have
brought and left at Columbine.
As you walk the hundred yards or so to the central memorial
area the trees by the sidewalk are wrapped with blue and silver
ribbons and some are draped with paper prayer chains. These
were put here by a school district somewhere in the Midwest,
and each link was made by a different student. Originally
at least one chain hung from each tree, but to preserve them
against the weather most have now been moved inside a tent
down the street. Most of the trees in the park are wrapped
with blue ribbons at the least; many have flowers laid beneath
them and other remembrances hung from their branches. On one
hangs a blue rabbit's foot.
Just before you reach the main memorial area there's a light
blue wooden A-frame shrine about four feet tall and six feet
wide dedicated to Cassie Bernall. It bears pictures of her
and handwritten messages, as well as balloons and flowers.
On the ground at one end is a one foot by one foot black board
lettered in gold calligraphy: "I promise that from this day
forth I will do everything in my power to insure that such
a thing as this will never happen again. I will change my
lifestyle and be more vocal and assertive in my beliefs."
Some
shrines are dedicated to all the dead, and others to individuals,
these probably placed by the victim's friends. As you turn
into the central memorial area the first thing you come to
is an elaborate tribute to Dave Sanders, the lone faculty
member killed and a man who died trying to save student lives.
This display features pictures of Sanders coaching, with his
family, his players and students; two Columbine softball jerseys
and a trophy; a pair of running shoes hangs from a tree; a
soccer ball and a basketball lie loose among the flowers.
The pile of flowers and stuffed animals threatens to swallow
the whole display.
Some local residents went to Clement Park even as the tragedy
was still unfolding and erected a series of lattices where
people could place flowers. This spot has become the centerpiece
of the memorial site, and eleven days later these lattices
have been overtaken and literally buried beneath the artifacts
of grief. I'm hard put to describe it, really. The central
area around the lattices is probably thirty yards by fifteen,
roughly oval. It's bordered by row after row of displays,
and if you didn't know what you were looking at you might
think yourself at some sort of carnival. Park officials have
covered the ground here and in other heavy traffic areas with
straw, adding to midway effect. More flowers, more teddy bears,
more posters than you can possibly count, and more unconventional
tributes stand in defiance of whatever hate drove Eric Harris
and Dylan Klebold to want to destroy an entire school and
all those in it. A volleyball lies before a sign placed by
Columbine alumni. Nearby a baseball rests amid the flowers.
There are also American flags, although fewer than you might
expect.
Seemingly every school in the Denver Metro area has placed
a memorial of some sort - whether a simple posterboard project
from a kindergarten class or something more elaborate from
a neighboring/rival high school, it's clear that this attack
is being taken very personally by students no matter where
they are.
There
are condolences from beyond the metro area, too. In addition
to the tributes from Oregon, North Carolina, Marin County,
and Pennsylvania, people in many other places have sent their
thoughts and prayers: besides condolences from cities across
Colorado, there are tributes from Maui; Cheyenne, Wyoming;
Lynchburg, Virginia; Allan, Texas; Gage, Oklahoma; Pace, Florida,
and Palm Springs, California. A blue banner hangs between
two trees: "Our thoughts and prayers are with you, from the
city of Fort Wayne, Indiana." A poster and letter have been
sent from Belvidere High School in Illinois, where on April
21, 1967, a tornado struck the school, claiming the lives
of 17 students. On the news yesterday morning they interviewed
a woman who had flown here as an emissary from her church
in Franklin, Tennessee. There are probably commemorations
from other communities, as well - it's easy to miss things
here. I think my fellow Coloradans wouldn't mind me speaking
for them in saying thank you to the citizens of these communities.
Southeast of this area several sets of windchimes hang from
a tree, ringing in the rain and the light wind. The chimes
are in the shapes of butterflies, doves, and a couple of birdhouses.
A young man who looks to be in his late teens is wandering
around handing out free flowers - I get a bouquet with carnations
and columbines.
A sign that especially caught my attention was originally
nestled in one corner, and it has now been moved under a tent
near the street. On a white sheet folded in half, written
in black magic marker, is a crudely drawn message that may
be among the most important for a community trying to heal.
In big letters: "Ours pains and sorrows for the victims of
CHS." In smaller letters across the bottom: "Not everyone
who wears trench coats are killers." Hanging just to the top
and right of this sign is a print of Warner Sallman's famous
portrait of Jesus, beatifically looking toward Heaven.
You may have read in the papers or heard reporters on CNN
talk about Rachel Scott's car. But even knowing it was there,
it still took me a few second to realize what I was seeing.
When it became apparent that Scott might be a victim, her
friends found her car in the parking lot and began placing
flowers on it. Since then the red Acura has been buried beneath
flowers, cards, teddy bears.... I only know it's an Acura
from news reports - you can't really tell by looking at it.
The driver's side especially is almost completely covered
by plastic. The passenger side isn't quite so concealed, though,
and I'm startled by the things we sometimes notice in times
of overwhelming sorrow. Rachel needed new tires. The right
front is almost bald. Another thing - lying on the bed of
flowers by the driver's-side door between three teddy bears
is a loose dollar bill.
A few feet away John Tomlin's truck, a brown-gold Chevy beater,
has also become an altar. John liked to off-road in the truck
- a popular diversion here in the high country - but now it's
hard to imagine it ever moving again. Vehicles are about as
secular as objects get in our culture, but in the wake of
this tragedy these two have been invested with a profound
aura of consecration. Relocating them will seem like graverobbing.
Adjacent to this lot is the portable satellite dish farm where
all the news outlets have their trucks and trailers and uplinks.
The memorial area is braced on one end (the end nearest the
school) by a few media tents, and one crew was preparing to
tape as we walked past on Wednesday. A reporter for the Today
Show was recording a segment a few feet away. Despite the
presence of the implements of media, the area remains quite
hushed. When people talk, they tend to whisper. They don't
look each other in the eye as they pass so much - if they're
like me, they don't want to see their own numbness reflected
back at them.
Still
more remembrances have been placed closer to the school itself.
The fences of the tennis complex, two sets of three or four
adjacent courts each, have become walls of posters and banners.
This is where the members of the San Jose Sharks, in town
for their playoff series with the Avalanche, placed their
banner on Friday - it's about fifty feet long and is signed
by literally thousands of fans: "To the community of Littleton,
Colorado - Our hearts and our prayers are with you." The Sharks
are wearing CHS emblems on their helmets for this series.
Other signs are placed by individuals, by towns and schools,
by a sorority from the University of Colorado. And here, a
new symbol - there are hundreds of angels and thousands of
bears, but hanging on the fence are two bears with angel wings.
Another sign notes the connection between Columbine, Oklahoma
City, Pearl, Paducah, Jonesboro and Springfield: "As the world
watched our lives were forever changed." On Saturday the baseball
team from nearby Arvada West High School is out in full uniform
touring the grounds.
Two
Hills
If you watched the memorial service on CNN last Sunday you
saw the hill in the distance where students were gathering.
It's actually two hills, and as you walk across the field
toward them you pass several other shrines - one, at the corner
of a recreation football/lacrosse field, is fairly large,
maybe ten feet by fifteen, a growing mound of flowers and
posters and bears. By Saturday it had been covered by a tent.
Cards and tributes hang from trees. There's a four-field softball
complex between the main memorial area and the hills, and
on the outside of one of the center field fences another teddy
bear sits with two or three cards. A smaller bear, wearing
a sweater, hangs on the fence, and there's a piece of paper
tucked under the sweater. I pull it out and unfold it. In
blue and pink marker it simply says, "We care." If you walk
around a bit you find these small, private remembrances all
over the place - here a loose bouquet of flowers lying in
the grass with no explanation at all, there a card or a balloon
or a bear, maybe indicating a mourner whose grief found no
solace in the company of others.
As I approached the hills on Wednesday it was growing dark
and beginning to rain. The skies have been heavy here almost
continually since the shootings, but as oppressive as the
weather has been there is a sense of rightness about it. On
Saturday it rained all day, with temperatures in the 40s.
There is only one safe path up the hill now, as the weather
and the foot traffic have rendered most of the area treacherous
with mud. The grounds crew has paved the main route up the
lower hill with straw, and hundreds of people wait in line
to view the hilltop memorial. Some make their way up by other
paths, slipping and sliding, but enduring nonetheless. Some
people take shelter beneath colorful umbrellas. Others, like
me, expose themselves to the skies. I can't speak for anybody
else, but there is nothing here I want to shield myself from.
Several
days ago fifteen crosses were erected along the ridge of the
lower hill by a craftsman from Chicago. Each cross bore the
name and picture of one of the dead - thirteen for the victims,
and one for each of the killers. People wrote messages on
each of the crosses, and many stress love and forgiveness.
The message at the top of Klebold's cross said, "God loved
you."
As you can imagine, the crosses dedicated to Harris and Klebold
stood amid some controversy. The cover of Thursday's Denver
Rocky Mountain News featured a photo of two students tearfully
facing off with a woman writing "a derogatory message on Dylan
Klebold's cross." Whatever the woman wrote was conspicuously
marked out, as well as whatever was written at the top of
Eric Harris' cross.
I walked from cross to cross, reading what I could in the
fading light. As I paused before the monument to Isaiah Shoels,
I thought about the irony of a kid who had fought to overcome
so much adversity. He worked to overcome a heart condition
and his small size (he was just 4'11") because he wanted to
play football, and his family reportedly transferred into
the Columbine district because it represented a better and
perhaps safer school environment. There he died because he
was black and an athlete. When I returned yesterday, I took
a marker with me so I could write Martin Luther King, Jr.'s
words on Isaiah's cross: "I have a dream...." But the wood
was so wet that the marker wouldn't write on it. A man behind
me, without even asking what I wanted to write, handed me
his marker, which he said was waterproof and should work.
But the soaked wood resisted this, too. I told myself I'd
come back when the weather broke and try again.
I won't get the chance. On Friday the father of Daniel Rohrbough
and some relatives went to the hill and took down the crosses
dedicated to Klebold and Harris. Mr. Rohrbough told reporters
that it was a simple matter of right and wrong, that people
coming to the hill wouldn't realize they were honoring killers.
"I don't think any thinking person in this country is going
to disagree with me," he said.
Two small makeshift crosses were quickly erected in the place
of the ones the Rohrbough family removed, and at the top of
each was written "Start to forgive."
Then, early this morning, the Chicago man who built and placed
the 15 crosses originally came and took them all down. CNN
captured them being loaded in the back of a pickup truck and
driven away, with all the remembrances that had been hung
on them still dangling from the crosspieces. He did not speak
to reporters, and no reasons were given.
Thirteen seedlings have appeared on the far hill - the taller
of the two - since Wednesday. A marker near the pinnacle reads:
"These 13 burr oak trees have been planted on this hill as
a memorial, one for each special person who had their life
taken. I will pray for each family every day. - Scott."
At the crest is yet another memorial site. At one end a variety
of Christian ornamentation hangs from a crude wooden cross.
I'm struck, as I have been for days, by how powerful a moment
this tragedy has been for Christianity. A bit of context -
I grew up Southern Baptist but left the church in my early
20s. I never rejected the lessons I learned growing up, but
the institution of the church seemed to have nothing to do
with morality or spirituality any more. Now I consider myself
a neo-pagan, although that term is fairly broad as I use it,
and a friend once listened to me for a few minutes and concluded
that I was a "Jungian" pagan. I'm fortunate to have Christian
friends and family who see through the trappings and accept
the person underneath.
I offer this information only to explain why I feel somewhat
left out by the healing process. The moral authority here
has been usurped by Christianity - at the local level the
churches have been the center of most gatherings, and nationally
our Vice President shared the stage with the Rev. Franklin
Graham, son of the famous Southern Baptist evangelist Billy
Graham. In the entirety of the memorial sprawl, which contains
hundreds of thousands of individual expressions of mourning,
I found precisely one overtly non-Christian religious symbol
- a small Star of David on a sign placed by the Montessori
School. There is another spot where I encounter sun and moon
symbols often employed by neo-pagans. The largest sun ornament
is attended by what I believe are Norse runes, but the symbols
hang from a cross.
The
Grief of Other Tribes
I don't make these observations to diminish people's faith
- on the contrary, while I'm not a Christian, I have taken
comfort in the fact that the community has a belief system
which can be called on in a time of crisis to lend support
and provide meaning.
But non-Christians are in pain, too, and as I faced the wooden
cross on that hill Wednesday I wanted to offer some gesture
in my own spiritual language, my own symbology. I was wearing
my pentagram, a symbol which for pagans symbolizes the sanctity
of the natural world and the human spirit (and which is all-too-often
mis-associated with Satanism), and wanted more than anything
to hang a symbol of my spirituality alongside those of the
Christians in my community as a statement of unity.
But I feared the gesture would be misconstrued by many, if
not most, visitors to the hill, and in such a time of pain
I couldn't imagine doing anything that would intrude upon
the grieving of others. What if somebody mistakenly took it
to be a Satanic cult mocking their sorrow? So I was forced
to a compromise. I was also wearing a Celtic cross, an ancient
pagan symbol often taken by Christians as reflecting their
faith (since it's a cross, after all), and I placed that on
the wooden crosspiece amidst rosary beads, angels, and more
crosses. The crosspiece itself is plastered with a bumpersticker
reading "No Jesus No Peace, Know Jesus Know Peace."
But a bridge has to be built between the normal and the marginalized.
Christianity is our dominant religion, but there must be a
space for those who find spiritual truth in other places,
just as our schools must make room for kids who dress differently
and don't fit into the accepted idea of what normal is. On
Saturday I decided to take a chance, and I hope my gesture
can be accepted in the spirit it was intended. A small white
board sits on the ground beside the "trench coat" sign I described
earlier. I brought a marker with me, and I knelt in the mud
and wrote this: "My tribe grieves with our Christian brothers
and sisters. We may walk different paths, but we are all children
of the divine. We love you." I signed it with my online handle/craft
name, Road Angel, and drew a small pentagram.
I can manage my own spirituality well enough, but can't help
noticing that even in the wake of a crime which resulted in
at least small part from the failure of conventional society
to respect those who are different, my own mode of expression
was limited and prescribed by the dominant belief system.
I thought back to whoever placed the sign saying that all
people who wear trench coats aren't killers - we praise individualism
and tell our kids to be themselves, not to bow to peer pressure,
to express their uniqueness, etc. But identity is negotiated,
and self-image often fights a losing battle with the perceptions
of the larger community. And now these children, these outcasts,
must prepare to face people who are pledging to "be more vocal
and assertive" about their beliefs.
I
said earlier that there were shrines to individual victims,
and the clear heroine of the tragedy, if number of tributes
is a fair indicator, was Cassie Bernall. When the gunman asked,
"Do you believe in God," her affirmative reply was her death
sentence, but it was also her entree into immortality in the
Christian community. She died in what most Christians would
see as the most noble way possible, as a martyr affirming
God, and the Rev. Graham assured us Sunday that she was ushered
directly into the presence of the Lord for her faith.
Cassie Bernall was indeed a heroine, even for those of us
who don't count ourselves as Christian, because these days
we so rarely find somebody whose courage is genuine enough
that they will die for their convictions. If I were
faced with such a moment, I hope I'd have her bravery, but
we never really know until the barrel rests against our heads,
do we?
Again, however, there's an element to the story that disturbs
me. A major news outlet reported that for a time Cassie was
involved with witchcraft and paganism (although what this
means precisely is unclear). She was apparently locked in
her room for a few days and was then sent by her parents to
a Christian "boot-camp" where she rediscovered Jesus.
If this is an accurate accounting, then we have another dire
example of the rage to conformity plaguing our culture. No
matter how productive we might see the result as being, no
matter how happy and loving Cassie Bernall turned out, the
essential dynamic remains. The message is clear: we'll do
whatever we have to do to make sure our kids don't become
like those trenchcoat/goth/Satanic/loser/geek/punk outcasts.
Different. Bad. We need to understand that the pressure that
brought Cassie back to Christianity is the same pressure that
drives other youths to less noble ends.
Are
Our Arms Really Open?
When I started writing this I don't think I had a point, but
maybe I have come to one through remembering what I saw. If
I have, this is it: in this time of pain and grieving, we
have to insure that it never happens again, but perhaps our
best-intentioned efforts are doomed to failure.
The community has been hit harder by these events than anything
I have ever seen with my own eyes before, although tragedies
of equal or greater magnitude happen somewhere in the world
on a frighteningly routine basis. Before last Tuesday I was,
like so many other residents of the Denver Metro area, somebody
who lived here, but who wasn't from here. I'm a North
Carolinian by birth and have always considered myself a Southerner.
But as I grappled to understand why this tragedy hurt me so
deeply and so personally, I finally came to understand that
somewhere along the way this has become home. I wasn't an
outsider looking in anymore - Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold
have torn my community.
So when I look at the imperative above - make sure it never
happens again - I can't help worrying that my community is
missing something important. If the culture's failure to accept
differences in others contributed to this deathlust, as the
killers said it did in their diaries, then how can we help
being concerned when our community is uniting around messages
and images of conformity instead of diversity? Somebody in
a trench coat reached out with that sign - "Not everyone who
wears trench coats are killers" - but I haven't seen the community
of normalcy reaching back. The media coverage and the church
services (some of which were televised here) have celebrated
the All-American and the Christian, and in doing so they provide
a powerful balm to people in need. But the others - the outcasts,
the trenchcoats, the goths, the geeks - all those who fail
to fit the conventional ideal, they were ignored, or worse,
scapegoated, and so an open wound in our culture continues
to seep.
These kids probably don't really want to join the church youth
group. But how much good it might do if they knew that the
church youth group wanted them, wanted them as they
are, and was willing to love and accept the person beneath
the black clothing, the person hiding behind the pale makeup,
the person who isn't very good at sports, the person who finds
solace in dark and tortured music, the person whose most rewarding
moments of personal acceptance come in the imaginary triumphs
of his or her role-playing game characters. How much good
it would do for them to know that they don't have to buy several
hundred dollars worth of Nike and Gap clothing to be validated
as human beings.
And if you believe that church youth groups aren't like that,
I should explain that a large part of why I walked away from
the Christian church was that all the youth groups I was associated
with during the first twenty years of my life were even more
cliquish and less tolerant of those who were different, new,
or simply uncool than my high school was.
Time
will tell. But in this issue we may have an answer to the
question on everybody's lips, a question you see repeated
over and over in the cards and posters littering Clement Park:
"Why?"
If
Cassie Bernall becomes an icon whose memory stands for inclusion,
we will have made her death and those of her classmates meaningful
beyond measure, and we will at least know that their tragic
passing was not in vain.
But if, in the aftermath of Columbine, we fail to understand
and bridge the gulf between "normal" and "outcast" then we
will be doomed to continue asking why as hate and rage and
loathing lay their claim on other schools in other communities
around our nation.
*
Author's Note: We have learned a great deal about the
events that took place at Columbine High School that day since
this essay was written (for instance, we now know that the
"Cassie Said Yes" story never actually happened,
and we also know that the whole "Trenchcoat Mafia"
thing is problematic). But it seemed to me that going back
and revising to account for new information would damage the
fabric of what I wrote in late April and early May of 1999.
I have therefore elected to leave the factual inaccuracies
in place.
However,
Salon.com and Westword.com provide as thorough and accurate
a picture as we are ever likely to have of the shootings and
the aftermath, and I recommend them highly.
Back
to text.
Sam
Smith
March 2001
B&W
photography by Heather Butler.
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