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Columbine: Parents of a Killer (Dylan Klebold)
David Brooks, May 15, 2004 New York Times
After I wrote a column a few weeks ago about the 1999
shootings at Columbine
High School, I got e-mail from Tom Klebold, the father of
Dylan Klebold, one
of the shooters. Tom objected to the column, but the
striking thing about
his note was that while acknowledging the horrible crime
his son had
committed, Tom was still fiercely loyal toward him. Which
prompts this
question: If your child commits a crime like that, what do
you do with the
rest of your life?
Tom and Susan Klebold have not really spoken to the press
about all this.
But the lawsuits against them are being settled, and they
trust The New York
Times, which is the paper they read every day, so they were
willing to have
a long conversation with me this week.
They are a well-educated, reflective, highly intelligent
couple (Dylan was
named after Dylan Thomas). During our conversation they
discussed matters
between themselves, as well as answering my questions.
Their son, by the
way, is widely seen as the follower, who was led by Eric
Harris into this
nightmare.
The Klebolds describe the day of the shootings as a natural
disaster, as a
"hurricane" or a "rain of fire." They say they had no
intimations of Dylan's
mental state. Tom, who works from home and saw his son
every day, had spent
part of the previous week with Dylan scoping out dorm rooms
for college the
next year.
When they first heard about the shootings, it did not occur
to them that
Dylan could be to blame. When informed, Susan said, "we ran
for our lives."
They went into hiding, desperate for information. "We
didn't know what had
happened," she said. "We couldn't grieve for our child."
That first night, their lawyer said to them, "Dylan isn't
here anymore for
people to hate, so people are going to hate you." Even as
we spoke this
week, Tom had in front of him the poll results, news
stories and documents
showing that 83 percent of Americans had believed the
parents were partly to
blame. Their lives are now pinioned to this bottomless
question: Who is
responsible?
They feel certain of one thing. "Dylan did not do this
because of the way he
was raised," Susan said. "He did it in contradiction to the
way he was
raised."
After the shooting, they faced a simple choice: to move
away and change
their names, or to go back and resume their lives. Susan
thinks about
leaving every day. "I won't let them win," Tom said. "You
can't run from
something like this."
So they live in the same house and work at the same jobs.
Susan works in the
community college system. "It's amazing how long it took me
to get up and
say my name at a meeting, to say, `I'm Dylan Klebold's
mother,' " Susan
says. "Dylan could have killed any number of the kids of
people that I work
with."
In general, Tom said, "most people have been good-hearted."
Their friends
rallied around. Their neighbors call to warn them if an
unfamiliar car lurks
in the neighborhood. There is a moment of discomfort when
they hand over a
credit card at a store, but there have been few bad scenes.
One clerk looked
at the name and remarked to Susan, "Boy, you're a survivor,
aren't you."
The most infuriating incident, Susan said, came when
somebody said, "I
forgive you for what you've done." Susan insists, "I
haven't done anything
for which I need forgiveness."
When they talk about the event, they discuss it as a
suicide. They
acknowledge but do not emphasize the murders their son
committed. They also
think about the signs they missed. "He was hopeless. We
didn't realize it
until after the end," Tom said. Susan added: "I think he
suffered horribly
before he died. For not seeing that, I will never forgive
myself."
They believe that what they call the "toxic culture" of the
school - the
worship of jocks and the tolerance of bullying - is the
primary force that
set Dylan off. But they confess that in the main, they have
no explanation.
"I'm a quantitative person," said Tom, a former
geophysicist. "We're not
qualified to sort this out." They long for some
authoritative study that
will provide an answer. "People need to understand," Tom
said, "this could
have happened to them."
My instinct is that Dylan Klebold was a self-initiating
moral agent who made
his choices and should be condemned for them. Neither his
school nor his
parents determined his behavior. Now his parents have been
left with the
terrible consequences. I'd say they are facing them bravely
and honorably.
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/05/15/opinion/15BROO.html


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