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Parkland survivors rally on eve of Columbine massacre

Thousands of students across the country are also expected to walk out of classes Friday to protest ongoing gun violence.
Credit: (Photo by Theo Stroomer/Getty Images)
Carlitos Rodriguez, a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, speaks during the Vote For Our Lives rally and vigil at Columbine High School on April 19, 2018 in Littleton, Colorado.

LITTLETON, Colo. — School shooting survivors from Parkland, Fla. rallied in Colorado on Thursday — the night before the 19th anniversary of the Columbine High School shooting — to push for stronger national gun control.

Headlined as “Vote for Our Lives,” the rally, adjacent to the site of the 1999 massacre, pushed for gun-control legislation to protect students in schools. Part of the effort involves getting high school students registered to vote if they’ll be 18 by the next election.

Thousands of students across the country are also expected to walk out of classes Friday to protest ongoing gun violence.

“They thought they were burying us. They didn’t know we were seeds,” said Emmy Adams, a senior at nearby Golden High School who helped organize the rally. “They didn’t know we would turn hate into action.”

Nearly 100 students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School flew from Florida for the rally, staying with local families who helped fund their trips. The Florida students, who said they were on excused absence from school, were to also participate Friday during a nationwide walkout against gun violence.

“It just feels surreal. We were born knowing what Columbine is,” Stoneman Douglas senior Michelle Dittmeier said after visiting the memorial. “I came here to not feel alone. And this really helps you to feel you’re not alone.”

Standing with her friends, Dittmeier held a sign remembering the 17 students and staff killed at her high school on Feb. 14.

The rally, which also touched on police violence in black communities, “exploitative journalists” and do-nothing politicians, also featured Columbine teacher Paula Reed, who survived the shooting that killed 13 students and staff, along with the two student gunmen.

Reed said the idea of arming teachers is folly, and called for legislation that could help prevent teen shooters from acquiring firearms.

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