
Children hold hands in prayer during a ceremony to remember Sherdavia Jenkins, who died at age nine when she was caught in the crossfire of a gunfight outside of her home ten years ago, July 1, 2016, in Miami. The ceremony paid tribute to all children lost to gun violence in South Florida. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)
Publisher
Washington Informer
At 11:11 P.M. on Saturday, July 16, Nyiah Courtney, a beautiful and smart six-year-old girl, was struck by a gunmanโs bullet in the course of a drive-by shooting at the intersection of Martin Luther King, Jr. Avenue and Malcolm X Avenue, S.E., in D.C. Her mother and father were among the two adult females and two adult males that also sustained gunshot wounds. All of the adults were treated for non-life-threatening injuries. Nyiah was killed.
A $60,000 reward for the arrest and conviction of the suspects responsible for Nyiahโs death was issued. The Washington Informer, a Black-owned newspaper headquartered just two blocks away from the fatal scene, offered an additional $5,000 contribution to the fund.
No amount of money, however, will bring Nyiah back. Meanwhile, street light poles ladened with balloons mark the place where Nyiah died.
Each passing day, as men, women, and children pass the growing memorial, they hug each other and wipe away their tears as they reflect on the little girl they all knew who brought a ray of sunshine to one of the cityโs most notorious street corners.

Nyiahโs death is not a singular occurrence. A Google search of โone-year-olds shotโ in 2020 returned multiple victims.
In Brooklyn, New York, 1-year-old Davell Gardner Jr., was killed while sitting in his stroller by someone who fired gunshots across a park.
In June of last year, a gunman killed 1-year-old Sincere Gaston and injured his mother in Chicago while driving home from the laundromat.
In Pittsburgh, three men involved in a shootout caused the death of 1-year-old Zykier Young, who was struck in the head and died while sleeping in his crib.
And, in D.C., 1-year-old Carmelo Duncan was fatally shot while strapped in his car seat in the back of a vehicle driven by his father. Carmeloโs 8-year-old brother was seated next to him and witnessed his little brotherโs untimely death.
Nyiah, Davell, Sincere, Zykier, and Carmelo are representative of the increasing number of children between the ages of 0-11 years old killed by gun violence since 2020.
The Gun Violence Archives, an online archive of nearly real-time gun violence data, reported 172 children between the ages of 0 and 11 were killed by guns, in addition to 675 teens between the ages of 12 to 17, as of July 19, 2021.
The Childrenโs Defense Fundโs most recent report on the State of Americaโs Children 2020 reported that โGun violence was the second leading cause of death for children and teens ages 1-19, and the leading cause for Black children and teens, claiming more child lives than cancer, pneumonia, influenza, asthma, HIV/AIDS and opioids combined.โ The report also stated that Black children and teens are four times more likely to be killed or injured with a gun than their white counterparts.
The CDF describes this as a โuniquely American phenomenonโ that allows for the โrelentless slaughter of children.โ
Since the killing of George Floyd, legions of protestors have justifiably filled the streets in cities across America, declaring โBlack Lives Matter.โ Their demands to defund the police are being responded to by city leaders willing to reallocate funds to other agencies to address community needs. Still, the guns keep flowing into communities and into the hands of irresponsible gun users whose targets increasingly are children, Black children, whose lives should matter, too.
Federal, state, and local leaders are beyond identifying gun violence as a public health issue; they have declared it a public health crisis. Organizations such as the American Medical Association (AMA) and the American Public Health Association (APHA) lead the charge. Meanwhile, Congress wonโt act on the cry to enact stricter gun laws. It tied the Centers for Disease Controlโs (CDC) hands by restricting its ability to provide more significant research on the impact of gun ownership and its relationship to suicides and other gun-related deaths.
At a press conference on Sat., July 17, the day following Nyiahโs death, Mayor Muriel Bowser, along with D.C. Police Chief Robert Contee, III, stood with the local heads of the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives and told residents they were โsick and tired of being sick and tiredโ of the gun violence plaguing the Nationโs Capital.

They described the perpetrators as โkillersโ with โwanton disrespect for human life, including the life of a child.โ
โIt is important that while we look for the killers of Nyiah, we also prevent the next murder, and thatโs within our sphere of influence within our community,โ Bowser said.
โToo many people are willing to use guns to solve conflicts. We all in the government are going to ask ourselves what more can we do, what different programs can we offer, but at the end of the day, weโre all going to have to exercise some community responsibility for each other.โ
Thatโs the definition of Black Lives Matter: exercising some responsibility for one another and ensuring our priority includes the care and protection of Black children.
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