Posted on 06/23/2014 3:51:48 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
As Rachel Jeantels high school graduation neared, she reminded herself of the promise she was keeping. Her slain friend, Trayvon Martin, would have wanted her to finish school, and she had promised his parents and other supporters that she would do it. And she did.
The world met Jeantel during the investigation of Martins murder. It was disclosed that she was the last person to speak to him before he was killed by George Zimmerman.
Over the course of two days, she testified as a key witness in the trial, withstanding questioning that lasted for six hours. She faced a storm of opinions, analyses, and judgments made about her some accurate, some not.
At the time, she was just a teenager thrown into the spotlight in the midst of a personal and national tragedy. It has become a chapter of her life she doesnt like to talk about, referring to it in solemn tones as the situation.
Just last year, Jeantel wanted nothing more than to be left alone. She was grieving and feeling guilty, choosing not to attend Martins funeral.
I was running from Sybrina [Fulton], she said referring to Martins mother. I wasnt ready to face her. I didnt want to talk about it.
She was traveling constantly for questioning as part of FBI, law enforcement, and legal investigations, thus missing a lot of school.
Nobody knew where I was. Id lie about where Id been every time somebody brought up Trayvon, and they would always bring it up in school [that he had been on the phone]. Id deny saying it was me, said Jeantel. All the traveling and talking to the FBI was too much on me, and I was doing it by myself. I still wanted my normal life.
That normalcy never quite returned. She still gets recognized at Wal-Mart, and sometimes people want to take pictures. Sometimes theyre too nervous to approach her, and send their children to ask instead. She shrugs off the attention: For now, I just deal with it.
Another adjustment has been the tidal wave of Black men and women who emerged to mentor, uplift, and prepare the now 20-year-old Jeantel as she transitions to college and womanhood. It began with her attorney, Roderick Vereen, who ushered Jeantel through the media spotlight after Zimmerman was acquitted of second-degree murder and manslaughter. He remains a fatherly figure in her life.
His assistant, Rose Reeder, manages Jeantels scheduling. Vereens friend, Karen Andre, also a lawyer, stepped up as a mentor. Miami-Dade School Board member Dorothy Bendross-Mindingall arranged for her to transfer to the Academy for Community Education, a small, attentive alternative high school where principal, Deborah Carter took Jeantel under her wing.
I was not used to that. It was a lot of people. I could never sneak around, I couldnt go no place! she said, laughing and sighing with appreciative resignation.
Once, one of her tutors visited her home and she invited him in to say hello to her parents, who speak limited English. He greeted them in fluent Creole, much to Jeantels chagrin. For the self-proclaimed spoiled-brat daddys girl who was used to having her way, this new team of no-nonsense adults who could report directly to her parents without her translation were not initially welcome.
Jeantel has even reunited with Sybrina Fulton and Tracy Martin, who she calls her number one supporters. Fulton attended her graduation, and was one of the people cheering her across the stage.
With her tutors, Jeantal is focused on vocabulary, grammar, and mathematic skills. With her mentors, shes focused on her well-being and gaining the necessary life skills to become independent. This summer she hopes to get a job. When her academic skills are up to par, shell enroll in college. In the far future, she sees a college degree and a creative career, ideally in fashion design.
Im grateful for Trayvon and everyday when I work hard or have the smack-down on me, I just say if he was here, he would say keep going.
Has the porker admitted telling Skittles to go punch out the creepy ass cracker?
Only difference, Doolittle was teachable.
With her tutors, Jeantal is focused on vocabulary, grammar, and mathematic skills. With her mentors, shes focused on her well-being and gaining the necessary life skills to become independent. This summer she hopes to get a job. When her academic skills are up to par, shell enroll in college. In the far future, she sees a college degree and a creative career, ideally in fashion design.
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Well, she certainly would get a serious look at, or even given a high-level starting job as a regional director at the VA...
By George, I think she ate it!
She can’t write/read her age in cursive if that’s what you mean.
ONe major quibble ith the story...
Martin was killed but it wasn’t “murder.” It was self-defense!
Proven in a court of law!
[thumbs up]
That's cause you're too fat to lay down.
She stannin her groun.
PIGMaylion, writ large.
:{)
Mm-hm. That heifer knows darn well she goaded Trayvon to go kick that cracker's butt. That's a guilty conscience there, from the get-go.
A 300 lbs slab of ghetto attitude
The master mentor (paraphrased): Did we succeed? No. You just cant get someone with no motivation to succeed.
That's actually pretty sad that it took that much effort and additional money to get her to barely qualify for HS diploma
It's even more horrifying that she is probably the rule than the exception on where many of these kids are education wise...
Think about it... we have literally hundreds of thousands of young adults that are barely literate, it will be impossible to educate them, after they have been so ill-educated....
That does not bode well for our country...long term...
still can not read cursive I bet.
It's Cursive that's her problem. Not to mention perjury. But it's dumb to be mad at Jeantel. There is no reason why she should not have been better educated at the tax-supported schools she attended.
That now she may well be beyond academic remediation? On us. Not her. We paid for her to receive it and she did not.
Yeah. She needn’t have feared, clearly the boy is more useful dead than alive, even to mom.
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