The tragic shootings at Sandy
Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., have increased the calls for
gun control around the nation and in Congress, but perhaps none have
been as poignant as that from 10-year-old Natalie Barden, sister of
victim Daniel Barden.
Natalie's letter, written to
President Barack Obama and read by Anderson Cooper on air, voiced her
clear and thoughtful belief that guns did not belong in the hands of
most civilians:
My name is Natalie Barden and I wanted to tell the president that only police officers and the military should get guns. If people want to do it as a sport than they could go to a shooting range and the guns would not be able to leave there.
Natalie, a member of the school
newspaper, originally had meant to hand the president the letter while
he was in Newtown comforting the grieving families, but became too
intimidated to give it to him. A friend of the Barden family, Lillian
Bittman, spoke with Cooper, who was also in Newtown, and asked him to
read it on air. He obliged.
In a recent interview,
Jackie Barden, the victim's mother, described her son as an old soul
who showed empathy beyond his years. His father recalled how he'd be
halfway to the car (after shopping, say) before turning around and
noticing that Daniel was still holding the door open for strangers.
Daniel was laid to rest on Wednesday.
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