I remember I remember. I was taking drivers ed in summer school. My father could not understand why I kept crying & wanted not to go to school that day.
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I was 13 when he was assassinated. His death devastated me.
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My mom woke me up at 5 am. I didn't want to go to school. I cried all day. It was a day that changed me forever.. I was very young.
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I was eight. Our parents let us stay up to hear his victory speech. When the announcer said he had been shot, my parents cried, they killed him. A few days later, we boarded buses to NY to stand along the funeral train route. It was a day without hope.
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Everything changed that day! Peace my friend. I was 13.
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Yes it did, but I am happy to say that many of the kids who took the journey to NY to see that train stayed engaged and involved. Best of all, we passed on to our children, the great hope and promise we felt at that time and the struggle to bring hope back.
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I agree. We keep dreaming of things that could be and say why not.
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It’s why resist!
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There was an excellent article written by Maggie Astor of NYT.
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Such a senseless tragedy, how long did he hang on?
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So sad.
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I love having my students conjecture what might have been if Robert Kennedy had lived. Feel like that was such a flash point.
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