As a proud Hokie and Virginia Tech alumna, I like to keep up with news about and within my university and I have a Google Alert set for whenever it makes headlines on online news stories. Since April 16th of 2007, however, the majority of these news stories relate back to the tragic shooting of that day rather than the achievements of our engineering departments or coverage of our exciting football games.
Our school suffers from the same stigma of other schools (such as Columbine High and Northern Illinois University) that have been terribly rocked by a shooting — it is for that single negative event that we become most famous for. We used to be just another great engineering school that boasted a strong football team, but now we are better known as the site of the deadliest peacetime shooting massacre by a single gunman. The label is heartbreaking, and the new news stories that pop up every few months, whether it be due to another shooting elsewhere or due to updates about the still-ongoing investigation of April 16th, serve as a constant inescapable reminder that the public perception of the university that I’d come to love so much has become marred by this single atrocious event.
And so another series of news stories came up in my Google Alerts yesterday, reporting that a revised report released by the Virgina governor showed that Virginia Tech officials had started to lock down administrative buildings and that a number of staff had even notified their families 90 minutes before an email alert was sent out to notify the rest of the campus that a gunman was on the loose. (see CNN story) Governor Kaine called the findings “inexcusable,” and Senator Chap Petersen of the 34th wrote that “the University’s decision to wait over two hours to alert the students of a campus shooting is inexcusable.” He continues:
What struck me – in reviewing Massengill’s report — was that Blacksburg public schools were “locked down” that morning of April 16, 2007 due to the shooting, yet the Tech administration blithely continued forward with classes.
This situation is not going to resolve until someone at Tech accepts responsibility. No one has been held accountable.
The internet is already swarming with scathing remarks about the “incompetence” of the administration and how they had enabled the events of the shootings to play out as they did. As a Virginia Tech student who witnessed her campus being ripped apart by the shooting less than a month before her graduation, I am deeply saddened by these comments. I think I speak for the majority of the Virginia Tech campus community and students when I say that I support the overall actions of our university administration. They had so little information at the time and the first incident of the two students being murdered at West Ambler Johnston dormitory seemed to them (understandably) to be an isolated domestic incident. They were hesitant to throw the campus into a climate of fear and confusion when they themselves knew so little about the circumstances. Looking back on the events, yes, I agree that there definitely could have been improvements and better ways that the administration could have handled the situation and that they should have alerted students earlier than they did. And it was irresponsible for the staff members to be calling or emailing family members rather than immersing themselves in disaster response. But hindsight is 20/20, and who would have even imagined that a violent massacre of such catastrophic proportions would ensue?
Despite what the public may think due to the events of April 16th and the other smaller, yet violent incidents that have seemed to plague our campus like a curse since, I can attest that Blacksburg was a truly safe, peaceful little college town for most of the five years that I was lucky enough to be a student at Virginia Tech. It’s one of those towns that are in a rural community that comes alive when school is in session, but grows as quiet as a ghost town during the summer months when the majority of their students are out of school. There were rarely any alarming incidents, and I personally felt that Blacksburg would be the least likely place for a violent crime to happen, that it was a place that I would never question my security — I felt safe there. If you ever lived in Blacksburg and were a part of the campus community, a school shooting on campus would have been beyond your imagination. Sure, we were unprepared, but who can ever be prepared enough for a horrific tragedy like that to unfold itself on your campus?
If you look at the larger picture with 9-11 and the anthrax scare, the nation’s own disaster planning was very limited itself. Airports had security measures, but the top concerns were about inclement weather rather than possible terrorist attacks. It was only after the attacks that security measures were considerably tightened to the strict checks we see in airports today. As terrible as these events were, they became useful for us to analyze them and figure out what are the best emergency practices to use in future emergencies, so as to hopefully prevent any similar tragedies from happening thereon.
Simply put, the Virginia Tech administration was not equipped with the experience nor training, expectations nor clear plan for responding to a disaster like this. As long as the administration has been as honest and forthright as possible (which I believe they have been), I stand by them and university president Charles Steger as I did from day one. Looking back to find a scapegoat other than Seung-Hui Cho is not going to help anything. He was the mentally unsound, deranged gunman that took every single one of those 32 innocent lives away. He is the one who singlehandedly brought so much heartbreak to their families and to our campus community; ultimately, there is no one to blame but Cho.
It’s difficult for me to look back on the days following the shooting without tears, because it was during that time that I experienced the most incredible pain and witnessed more sadness than I’d ever seen in my entire lifetime. Losing a friend in such a horrific way was unthinkable and traumatizing in itself. Watching the events unfold on television while we were unable to leave our apartment, I felt as though I was watching a horror movie — the buildings and streets of our campus suddenly looked so unfamiliar as I witnessed SWAT teams and scores of police cars gridlocking them. Our AASU board was completely broken at our meetings in the days that followed, grieving our lost friends and professors but also having to deal with the exhaustion and stress of being hounded by the media all because the killer had been Korean. My cell phone didn’t stop ringing with calls from not only domestic media reporters but Japanese and other international reporters as well, and our email boxes were inundated by requests for comment. Some even had the audacity to come to my apartment. The school that we all love had been branded the site of a historic massacre, and we couldn’t even kick the media out because we are a public university… they ended up camping out and harassing the campus community for over a week, and returned when it came time for commencement. Through it all, president Steger showed tremendous leadership, strength, and poise, while at the same time exhibiting compassion for his students. The events of April 16th must have taken as heavy a toll as it has for the victims’ families, and he must have felt as though he himself had lost 32 beloved children. I have never felt anything but respect for our university president and our administration.
Although it has been over two and a half years since April 16th, we are still healing. The process will probably take years, even a lifetime for many of us. There are still days when the tears just unexpectedly come and won’t stop for a few hours. In some ways, it was easier when I was with fellow Hokies who understood and we could act as mutual support for each other. Finding areas to place more blame is not going to change the past and is not instrumental in the healing process at all. What matters more now is to educate people and help establish more precautions to prevent more school shootings from happening. An employer of mine once made a comment on April 20th that she thought the celebration of 4/20 in reference to cannabis was much more appealing, newsworthy, and “less depressing” than remembering the anniversary of the Columbine shootings. I was personally shocked by the comment — although she may have meant it as a joke and she may not have realized that I came from a school that suffered a very similar fate to Columbine, the joke was not tasteful and was very disrespectful to families and friends of not only Columbine victims but to everyone who has had to deal with the repercussions of such a tragic event. Her flippant comment both hurt and angered me, and made me realize that there are still so many ignorant people out there who can just brush off the news of a school shooting without a second thought. I really feel that our focus should be targeted to educate people like this and make them aware of the severity of such an incident so that something like this should never happen again, rather than to expend so much time and effort trying to find someone accountable other than the perpetrators themselves.
Laura
December 5, 2009 @ 2:43 pm
Misono, this was very well-written. I feel similar to you. I really don’t think people understand the feelings unless they were one of the ones there. I like how you phrased “watching our campus get ripped apart a month before my graduation” because that’s what it was. It had such an odd impact, and really did rip things apart in ways someone who has not gone through such a thing would imagine. It affected everyone on that campus in both a universal way, and in personal, different ways based on their own histories and lives.
I find that, 2 years later, I can’t really watch TV shows about it. It angers me and makes me feel anxious in an odd way. Having people who weren’t there pass their opinions about an even they weren’t even part of. It brings me to a depressed, angry, sad and almost frantic state and I have to think about something else. I can’t even explain it!
Recently with the shooting at Fort Hood, it stirred up those feelings. Seeing people using that tragic shooting event for political, anti-Muslim agenda made me furious. I mean REALLY angry. Knowing the pain and suffering a community goes through when that happens, it just infuriated me in this inexplicable way that I could barely even explain. Trying to pin a shooting on a religion is ridiculous, when it can happen to anyone, anywhere, any time, for any nonsensical reason. (Like it did to us)…. See More
Anyway, sorry for the rant. See just reading your blog stirred it up, lol! And the flippant attitude gets me too. I miss being among Hokies who are the only ones who understand. At the first year anniversary, only one person commented on my marroon and orange, and it made me feel empty and angry inside. On the second year, I work black with a little ribbon, and my boss gave me a weird look for wearing black, as if it was odd I was still affected by it.
So…yeah. I guess reading your post just makes me realize that we are all still affected by this, in similar ways.
Well-written post. And I agree about whether or not the campus reacted to slow, or not. I don’t even care about that aspect. No one was prepared for it to happen, no one expected, and the least of my worries is whether or not a stupid email went out warning us what was happening or not.
Ann Helen
December 5, 2009 @ 4:51 pm
I can’t imagine how that must be like for you and all the students there, not to mention the families of the victims. Thanks for sharing that, Misono!
Jeff
December 5, 2009 @ 7:58 pm
Great Post Misono, I agree with everything you said.
Unfortunately, there will always be those with political or personal agendas, agendas to scandalize and ‘sell’ news, or somehow advance their career, that feel the need to stir the waters of blame, go on a witch hunt, etc.
I think every one of us who were at VT then knows only one person is responsible. I never really felt too strongly one way or another about our administrators, but when people throw out the idea that they were somehow complicit in what happened, it’s just ludicrous, and has me leaping to give support for the school officials. The idea that anyone would have knowingly allowed this to happen.. to what possible end? … See More
I’d like to know what ANY of these people think Dr. Steger or any of the other administrators would have gained from such a thing happening? There’s just no rationale to it, whatever your goals may be.
What has always been shocking to me is how many people thought there was a way to ‘lock down’ our school. Its the size of a town, so many building of such different eras, its not a high school where you can just seal 4 doors and go back to class. A living, breathing, community just doesn’t work that way, and I personally wouldn’t be comfortable with working for/attending such a closed off, crippled environment. I feel bad for anyone who works at an airport and has to empty their pockets or to get scanned daily just to go to their job! That could be us, and what a horrble situation if it was.
Anyhow I appreciated reading your thoughts. Hope you are doing well!
Misono
December 5, 2009 @ 10:28 pm
Thank you all for reading through that long blog post of mine. After I wrote it, I thought to myself, “Will anyone actually read through all of this?” but I’m glad that I had some readership! 🙂
Laura, I felt the same way after I heard about the recent Fort Hood shootings, and when they tried to tie it back to VT because he was an alumnus, that made me even more frustrated… it’s really true that an incident like this will stay with you for and years and years to come. I can’t really watch anything with too much gun violence anymore just because it means more than just another action scene to me now that I’ve seen how it can so easily take away lives.
Ann Helen, thanks for reading my blog post! It was really a rough time for the whole campus community, students, faculty and staff alike, but the best thing that could come out of this is for people to really understand the horrors of a school shooting and to create better measures to prevent events like this from happening again. In this case, it was really a failure of the mental health system.
Jeff, I wholeheartedly agree that locking down a whole university, especially one the size of Tech, is not an easy task. It probably wasn’t an easy decision for the administration to just lock down the whole campus based on what little they knew. As you mentioned, we’re talking dozens of buildings and hundreds of doors… it’s not like you flip a switch and everything is instantly shut down. … See More
Thank you for your thoughts and input!
Becca
December 6, 2009 @ 4:24 am
Well written.
I think about this sort of thing when we’re sitting in the middle of a lockdown drill at school (we have them at least once a month). About 1/3 of the time, i am with a class where some kid tries to make a fart joke in the middle of a lockdown to make everyone laugh, an action which could potentially get us killed in a real lockdown situation. It’s scary as a teacher that the actions of little kids in my class could get me killed. If it ever happens, my entire class has to sit in lockdown for the remainder of their class, even after the drill is over. Because, really, some people need to be taught how important it is before we all “learn” the hard way.
Estella
December 6, 2009 @ 10:15 am
Wow, very well written and thought out, Misono. To be honest, I was one of those people that could easily brush off the situation, taking for granted that I’m fortunate to have never experienced such an event. Thanks for shedding light on what it’s like from your perspective, and for allowing this opportunity for others to learn from it. 🙂
I think from the shoes of people like me, we’re very disconnected from the event itself–it’s hard for us to grasp the scale of impact, and it’s difficult to imagine it happening on our own campuses (though it could very well possible). I think in that sense, people don’t know how to react to these type of events, and can easily just take in what the media tells them–which isn’t right, of course. The disconnect allows people to easily brush it off, especially when it’s occurred so far away.
Again, thanks for the insight, and for having the passion to educate others on the topic!
Ashly
December 6, 2009 @ 10:28 am
Thank you Misono. The place I currently work, every time VT comes up in the news I have people coming by my desk saying “Did you hear what happened at your school?” Also, with the Fort Hood incident, I had people asking how come I didn’t know he was from VT, like I should know every graduate that comes from there.
When I talked to Helly one day we were commenting on how they add the shooter at Fort Hood was from VT. We feel like they tagged it on there like ‘Oh, and by the way, he likes chocolate ice cream.’ It would not be on that article at all if not for April 16th.
It’s getting on my nerves that I have people telling me I went to a college that allowed a killer. No one understands unless they went there how hard it was, and how much I still love that school. It was a horrendous day but the community and school helped us get through the tragedy.
Instead of people asking my opinion of the incident I find them telling me what I should be thinking and it frustrates me. They all tend to look shocked when they’re speaking derogatory comments and when I can’t take it anymore I inform them to please stop and that I lost friends there and they’re so callously talking about it.
This was very well written Misono and I agree wholeheartedly with it.
Thank You
Misono
December 6, 2009 @ 11:32 am
Becca: It’s hard to make young children understand how serious these drills are… I know that even in college, drills were not taken very seriously just because everyone sort of knew it was a drill. It’s just unfortunate that many times people don’t realize the weight of disasters like this until something actually really happens. It’s comforting to know that at least schools are engaging their students in drills like that. Is it done in most schools nationwide now, or just in your county?
Estella: I completely understand the disconnect that you would feel if you didn’t go to the school and have never lost someone you knew in such a way. When I heard about Columbine when I was younger, I felt shocked but like you, I just felt like it was something that happened so far away, so I didn’t dwell on it. It was only once something similar (but even worse) happened at my own school that I was forced to face the reality that the families, friends, and classmates of these victims have to live with what happened for the rest of their lives. It doesn’t just go away after an hour like it does for the rest of the country that just sees it on TV and reads it in the papers. We were really touched by the outpour of support and encouraging messages from universities and companies from around the nation though, and I think I remember UCLA being one of them. You can see some photos here.
Ashly: I would hate to have to deal with those sort of reactions in my workplace. Where I am, though, there are so few Virginia Tech alumni that half the people aren’t aware or don’t remember what had happened there so they don’t even touch on it. The other half, when I tell them my alma mater, they respond with “Oh… that school… were you there when…?” and it gets kind of awkward because that is all they know about Tech. I totally agree with you and Helly, how they just made such a big deal about the fact that the Fort Hood had gone to Virginia Tech decades ago when we all know that they wouldn’t even have really mentioned it if he had gone to any other school that hadn’t experienced a violent incident (with the exception of Ivy League… the media always makes a huge deal about Ivy League alumni regardless). The media makes it look as though Virginia Tech breeds killers, when these are purely cases of unlucky coincidences. It could have happened anywhere. I’m sick of them sensationalizing our school when many of us are still very much in the healing process. I miss you Ashly! I wish I could give you a big hug right now. But soon enough 🙂