The heroism of Antoinette Tuff
A reader sent along a link to a story about an amazing woman who talked down a gunman at an Atlanta-area elementary school. Her name is Antoinette Tuff and the full 9-1-1 call she made -- which includes her conversation with the gunman -- is gripping. You can hear it from CNN here. Her courage is inspiring and her love for her neighbors is just beautiful. She talks about her own hardships to help him see that he's not alone in having a bad situation. The love she shows the mentally disturbed man who could have destroyed so many lives is just staggering. The story the reader sent in, from ABC News/Yahoo included the following passages:
Hill, according to Tuff, said he had no reason to live because nobody loved him.
"And I just explained to him that I loved him," Tuff told ABC News in an exclusive interview Tuesday night. "I didn't know much about him. I didn't know his name but I did love him and it was scary because I knew at that moment he was ready to take my life along with his, and if I didn't say the right thing, then we all would be dead."...
"I knew at that time it was bigger than me," she said. "He was really a hurting young man, so I just started praying for him. And just started talking to him and allowing him to know everything that was going on with me and that everything was going to be OK."
Then Tuff made the request that she said helped end the standoff. She asked the suspect to put his weapons down, empty his pockets and backpack and lie on the floor.
"He brought a gun bag, a book bag, a bag full of ammunitions in there, a bunch of magazine clips in there, a whole lot of stuff," she said...
Tuff said she will be returning to work later this morning.
"Yes, I will be back," she said, "sitting in that same seat, blessing that next person."
The comment from the reader, a journalist herself, "Talk about a religion hole."
Indeed. If you want to know more about the religious motivations of this woman who helped save so many lives, don't look to em>Parade magazine. The story has nothing about her religious views.
One of my concerns about how journalists cover shootings is the fame given to those who kill others. When men and women courageously thwart gunmen, their names and actions should be remembered and covered well. The media have, in fact, done a good job of noting Tuff's courage, but looking at what gave her the strength to handle such a worrisome situation could be handled better.
The Los Angeles Times ended its piece on the matter with this quote:
When it was all over, she said a prayer: "I said, 'Thank you, Jesus.' "
NBC News gave this snippet:
Only after the ordeal was over did Tuff reveal just how scared she'd been the whole time:
"I'm going to tell you something baby β I've never been so scared in all the days in my life," she told the unidentified operator. Then, she started crying and exclaimed, "Oh, Jesus! Oh, God!"
To which the operator told the courageous bookkeeper: "You did great. Hold on. Hold on"
More, please.
There's another religion angle cropping up in this story.
The gunman is known to have had serious mental health problems and, according to some sources, he never knew his father and his birth mother died. A pastor and his wife took the young man in for some time and he was currently living with another church family. This Associated Press story tells us these things without mentioning even the name of the church in question. It's the Prophetical Word Church in Decatur, according to NBC News.
Religion angles abound in this story of mental illness, gun violence and heroism. I hope a reporter can help us learn more about those angles by covering them well.