TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「Kiki Leyba remembers April 20, 1999, as a day of two life-altering extremes. He was a first-year Columbine High School teacher meeting with the principal, who had just offered him a contract to continue teaching there—his dream job—when gunshots rang out in another part of the building. What he called "one of the top-10 best mornings of my life” turned into a “horrifically tragic afternoon,” as two students killed 13 people in one of the deadliest school shootings in American history. Leyba, 57, is one of 13 educators still teaching at Columbine 20 years later, working with students who weren’t even born when the shooting took place but who have grown up familiar with the routines of gun violence at a time when mass shootings occur with alarming frequency. Survivors are often called upon for their perspectives, even as many still struggle to make sense of what happened in 1999 and have no simple explanations for why it keeps occurring. “We’ve become the weird grandparents of school shootings, and when they happen, inevitably, people will reach out to us—sometimes it’s media, sometimes it’s communities—to try to understand why is this still happening,” Leyba says. “Why would we know?” In this photograph, Leyba poses for a portrait at a memorial site in Littleton, Colo., on April 18. Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @theostroomer for TIME」4月20日 23時40分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 4月20日 23時40分


Kiki Leyba remembers April 20, 1999, as a day of two life-altering extremes. He was a first-year Columbine High School teacher meeting with the principal, who had just offered him a contract to continue teaching there—his dream job—when gunshots rang out in another part of the building. What he called "one of the top-10 best mornings of my life” turned into a “horrifically tragic afternoon,” as two students killed 13 people in one of the deadliest school shootings in American history. Leyba, 57, is one of 13 educators still teaching at Columbine 20 years later, working with students who weren’t even born when the shooting took place but who have grown up familiar with the routines of gun violence at a time when mass shootings occur with alarming frequency. Survivors are often called upon for their perspectives, even as many still struggle to make sense of what happened in 1999 and have no simple explanations for why it keeps occurring. “We’ve become the weird grandparents of school shootings, and when they happen, inevitably, people will reach out to us—sometimes it’s media, sometimes it’s communities—to try to understand why is this still happening,” Leyba says. “Why would we know?” In this photograph, Leyba poses for a portrait at a memorial site in Littleton, Colo., on April 18. Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @theostroomer for TIME


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