Too many lives are being lost, too many victims injured, and too many communities are being held hostage to this systemic and endemic tide of violence. As a government, and as a community, we must begin to offer proactive, rather than reactive, alternatives. - Kenneth E. Barnes, Sr. MS...

 

 

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Reaching Out to Others Together

To get to the ROOT of the problem

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  History

 

TO PREVENT ANOTHER PARENT OR FAMILY FROM SUFFERING THIS...

 

Kenneth Barnes, Sr., was working towards his doctoral degree at Loyola College in Maryland, the first and the only African/American male as well as being the oldest student in the program at the time, when tragedy of the worst kind struck. On September 11th, 2001, the United States of America was a victim of the most vicious, brutal acts of terrorism ever in the history of this country. Like most Americans, Mr. Barnes watched the events unfold before me, in a state of dismay. Also, like most Americans, Mr. Barnes was in disbelief, in shock, and Mr. Barnes agonized with the victims and their families. However, to be candid, these horrific acts seemed almost surreal - it was if Mr. Barnes were watching a movie.

 

On September 24th, Mr. Barnes witnessed another event of tragic proportions, the likes of which he never thought he would see beyond a TV or movie screen. Mr. Barnes saw a tornado. This tornado worked its way through the District, down a major highway in Laurel, Maryland, and left a path of chaos and destruction in its wake. He remembers thinking at the time (as he sped away as fast as he could in his car in the opposite direction), that he had been an onlooker to a set of events that never in my wildest dreams he would ever live to see. The twin towers of New York obliterated as well as the bombing of the pentagon, and, now, a tornado, unheard of in the history of the District of Columbia, rambling down a highway, right before my eyes. Somewhere in the recesses of his mind Mr. Barnes remembered the saying that tragedy struck in threes, and what else could possibly happen.

 

September 24th was the night Mr. Barnes' son was brutally murdered. He remembers coming home that evening, still shaken about the fact that he had just outrun a tornado, when the phone rang. It was his sister calling, and her first question to him was one of concern. She wanted to know whether he was ok. Her second question was whether or not he had heard the news - his son had been shot. Only a parent could possibly know what he felt at that moment. A queasy feeling began in the pit of his stomach, a lump welled in his throat, and the tears began forming in his eyes. However, surprisingly enough his first thought was that his son would be all right, that he had suffered some superficial wound at best.

 

Mr. Barnes' sister's information was sketchy as to the details. She knew that he had been shot and that he was being transported to a hospital, but she was unsure of which hospital. Mr. Barnes then placed a call to his daughter-in-law and heard the words that have to be the worst nightmare of any parent. His son, his oldest child, his only male child, had been murdered. When Mr. Barnes heard those words, it was as if a strong gust of wind had taken his breath away.

 

It was at that moment he really understood what the families of the victims of the September 11th tragedy felt. Mr. Barnes understood their agony, he understood their pain, and he understood their emotions. In addition, Mr. Barnes became as one with every parent who has ever lost a child under similar circumstances. He felt as all must have felt at the moment of realization. Besides the surge of emotions, the questions arose who would do this to his child and why; and then the rage begins to swell and revenge becomes foremost in the mind.

 

Mr. Barnes' mind raced as he hurried to the hospital to see his son. Upon arrival, the nightmare became a reality. Mr. Barnes' son lay dead on a cold, metal hospital transport bed, covered by a white sheet. Needless to say, the scene at the hospital, with the arrival of family and friends, was probably one that has become all too familiar with hospital staff. Mr. Barnes became so overcome with grief that he became a patient himself in the emergency room as he could not breathe due to an acute asthma attack.

 

As Mr. Barnes left the hospital, he immediately sought information as to what happened. He learned that there was an eyewitness who could identify the perpetrator by sight but did not know who he was. Through conversation with various sources, Mr. Barnes learned that others had witnessed the murderer as he left the store. He found out not only who the murderer was, but where he lived as well. Because of Mr. Barnes' direct involvement in finding out who the perpetrator was, the police were alerted right away and the killer turned himself into the police within 48 hours. Mr. Barnes subsequently became aware of the fact that this young man had killed two other people of which the authorities were aware. In September of 2000, from his understanding, he had murdered another young man in front of a night club in northwest DC because of a dispute over a young lady; and in August of 2001, a little over a month prior to the murder of Mr. Barnes' son, the murderer cold-bloodedly shot - and killed - another young man in the middle of the street, shooting him nine times as the victim begged for his life. Yet this young man, 17 years of age at the time, was still brazenly and openly walking the streets of Washington, DC.

 

Mr. Barnes' heroic efforts lead to the arrest and conviction of the perpetrator of these horrendous murders. Mr. Barnes understands first hand the emotional grief, stress, and shock of losing a child. These unfortunate set of circumstances motivated him to establish ROOT (Reaching Out to Others Together) Inc. It is his firm contention that only because of the efforts of a community working together to include the police, the community at large, the media, and the business community, and himself was the killer so swiftly apprehended. 

 

 

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