Keith Chatinover, in orange hat, marching in Washington.
Amelia Simmons

Marching for a Better World, Gratefully

February 14, 2018 was like any other Wednesday for me. After school, I went with my golden lab and my friend Isabella Youmans on a hike at Caroline Tuthill Preserve.

February 14, 2018 was like any other Wednesday for me. After school, I went with my golden lab and my friend Isabella Youmans on a hike at Caroline Tuthill Preserve. A group of friends and I had dinner at my house.

But as the day shifted from afternoon to evening, I received an alert or two on my phone about a school shooting in Florida. I flipped on the TV and saw the typical coverage from MSNBC. Deadly school shooting. Predictable responses from the politicians in power. Thoughts and prayers as usual.

As I thought about what would happen next, I figured nothing would change. What happened after Sandy Hook and Las Vegas at the national level? Nothing. Why should I expect anything else? I would see meme after meme on Facebook about how we need gun control. I would see statements with the usual degrees of outrage and horror with the occasional call to action. And then after a few weeks we would move on. Just like every single other time.

But I was wrong. The students from Parkland, Fla. stood up and called b.s. on our leaders for being completely wrong on gun control and ignoring the outcries of students around the nation who no longer feel safe in their schools.

Later I heard about the March for Our Lives, which was being organized by those very same Parkland students for a Saturday in March. I was immediately interested in attending, and when I brought up my interest during a class at the Martha’s Vineyard Public Charter School, the response I received probably shouldn’t have surprised me, but I was nevertheless struck by my fellow students’ enthusiasm: “I want to go,” “Oh, me too,” “Can I come with you?”

So I said, with a naivety and optimism reserved for teenagers, that we should organize a bus to go down to D.C. and march. Many people quickly signed up, from the Charter School and then the rest of the community, but a problem emerged: the bus was going to cost about $100 a ticket, even if we successfully filled every single seat. I quickly realized that if teenagers were going to be able to rally with their fellow passionate teens, then we were going to have to raise funds from the community.

The funds came in hot and heavy. The community was nothing short of unbelievable; within weeks I received the full amount for the first bus and, amazingly, a second bus. As the funds came in, so did the numbers for the buses. We ended up with over 100 signups, a large majority of whom were students from the Martha’s Vineyard Public Charter School, Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School, Falmouth High School, and other Cape schools.

The March itself was everything I could have wanted and more. There were the revolutionary students from Parkland and elsewhere who stood up on the stage and cultivated our idealistic spirits. They are the students who have not only dealt with tragedy close to them, but have used that anger and disbelief and turned it into action and results.

As we took the bus back home from Washington, the thought that I couldn’t get out of my mind was that this was the beginning of a movement. And it isn’t just about gun control.

Instead, it is about young people finally getting involved. It is about young people knowing who is on the ballot. It is about young people and their fellow young people, friends and acquaintances and people they’ve never met, getting involved. It is about civic engagement no longer being reserved for the dorks.

I am sure that I am speaking for the entire youth delegation in saying thank you for helping our trip get going, and that in return we will stay involved in politics. We will run for office, press our elected officials, and make sure that our disproportionately loud voices speak up over and over and over again.

Keith Chatinover is a senior at the Martha’s Vineyard Public Charter School.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 03/29/2018 - 20:39

Permalink

Susan Levine West Nyack, NY

Thank you, Keith, for your efforts, your eloquence on this, your great organization skills! Your generation, and kids like you, are our hope. I am proud to know you.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 03/30/2018 - 03:42

Permalink

Martha Magee

There's a BLUE WAVE a COMIN'!!!
YES WE/SHE/THEY CAN!!!
These kids have their lights turned on and they're like lasers!

THANK YOU !!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 03/30/2018 - 11:43

Permalink

Eileen Hamblin Melrose, MA

Thank you, Keith. Your commentary was very moving. Congratulations on organizing and completing this epic journey. I wish you well as you stay involved and I hope you continue to hold our feet to the fire.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 03/31/2018 - 18:27

Permalink

Margo Swezey

Thank you for this, Keith. You and others like you bring a big dose of hope right when it is sorely needed.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 04/02/2018 - 16:24

Permalink

Jean Lythcott Palo Alto, CA

As a founding teacher at MVPCS I am touched beyond measure by each action piece of this. Keith Chatinover your initial reaction, your belief that you could do something, and that you followed through, I am so thankful for you in the is world. That the students in your class and MVPCS responded to the call is testament to the power of inspiration and stood up to join in reminds me of Rev Martin Luther King Jr.'s message that all it takes for evil to survive is for good people to stay silent. The the whole Island chipped in real money to buy the buses is the island community i got to know and love in my time time there, all power to the people and that this all ended up including students form Martha’s Vineyard Public Charter School, Martha’s Vineyard Regional High School, Falmouth High School, and other Cape schools is heartbreakingly moving.
I wonder if you will follow through and send this piece to Stoneman Douglas HIgh School students ... they would love it and be buoyed beyond measure to keep going.
Finally I want to urge all of us to take the narrative away from the status quo with its meager language for tackling such a huge problem. Let's not use their sense of the scope of the problem. "Gun control" not enough! Mental health background checks not enough!. We need to address PUBLIC SAFETY the same way we fought for Public Safety by requiring cars ... the vehicles of death and maiming back then ... to be registered, for everyone to be required to pass a test to get a driver's license and creating, the DMV, a Department of Motor Vehicles to be responsible for all that government required regulation. And increased safety on our roads was immediate. We need a Department of Firearms and Ammunition, The DFA for a similar set of regulations.

Add new comment

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.