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- Message-ID: <ETHICS-L%93012400424514@VM.MARIST.EDU>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.ethics-l
- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1993 23:35:19 CST
- Sender: Discussion of Ethics in Computing <ETHICS-L@UGA.BITNET>
- From: Rodger Kamenetz <ENRODG@LSUVM.BITNET>
- Subject: Yoshi Hattori petition
- Lines: 188
-
- Dear Colleagues, I am passing this on in hope you might aid Prof. Haymaker
- of LSU. This was originally posted to Buddha-l. Thank you. Rodger Kamenetz
- 254 Nelson Drive, Baton Rouge, LA 70808
- January 4, 1993
- Dear Members of the Buddhist Community,
-
- On October 17, we received a call from the police that we all dread. We
- were told that our son Webb is ok but our other son, our AFS exchange student
- Yoshi Hattori from Japan, had been shot and killed. The boys knocked on the
- door of the wrong house believing that they had arrived at a Halloween party.
-
- Our first response was to tell Yoshi's story to everyone who would listen; we
- wrote an essay that was published in the New York Times and International
- Herald Tribune and gave about 50 media interviews. We believe that the story
- will raise the consciousness of our country and touch a nerve; it certainly
- has in Japan which has been saturated with news coverage. Our second re-
- sponse now is to circulate a petition as the Hattoris are doing in Japan. We
- are writing to seek the help of everyone who believes we can still turn our
- country away from ever increasing gun violence. We appeal to you since Yoshi
- was a Buddhist. His funeral in Japan was a 35 day Buddhist ceremony.
-
- The Hattori petition to the President of the United States and the Prime
- Minister of Japan asks Americans to "Tighten the controls on individual
- ownership of firearms". They already have 800,000 signatures. The Hattoris
- delivered 40,000 signatures to the Bush Administration via the US Ambassador
- to Japan, Mike Armacost. Prime Minister Miazawa met with them also.
-
- We have started the enclosed petition in the US in the same spirit as theirs.
- We have launched it through all contacts we can find; including purely
- grassroots efforts like this and through newsletters, newspapers and large
- and small national organizations. We both expect to get millions of
- signatures. This could culminate with the Hattoris and us and possibly high
- profile public figures in the battle against gun violence, presenting the
- petitions to President Clinton sometime in the spring. Both petitions are
- from the heart, not attempting to lobby specific legislation. Both petitions
- are really asking the American people, through their president, to find a way
- to deal with this scourge. This personal tragedy can be a springboard for
- discussion of ideas far beyond the actual event. If all goes as planned there
- will be follow-up of more substantive efforts. We feel the opportunity
- afforded by a huge ally of millions of Japanese people must not be lost.
-
- There are three ways in which you can help us get millions of signatures:
-
- We are writing to our friends and colleagues all over the country asking them
- to circulate the petition among their friends and to continue the process.
- It can then be circulated easily among friends. To those who feel very
- strongly, we urge you to take it to your community organizations and places
- of worship. We am asking specifically if you would please consider copying
- this letter and the petition and writing to your friends and colleagues.
- Of course one signature would be appreciated. If you would like to help in
- this larger way we need you very much and welcome you to our effort.
-
- Getting this petition to select individuals is another key to the success of
- this drive. We have found people who are extremely upset over the prolifera-
- tion of gun violence in this country and are very anxious to get involved.
- Would you please try to think of individuals who might be key in this drive
- and contact them and get the petition and our phone number to them.
-
- Third, if you think of an appropriate newsletter, or organization that might
- publish the petition or publicize it please contact us.
-
- Our sincere thanks, Holley Galland Haymaker and Richard Haymaker
- (504) (h) tel:766-6432; (h) fax:769-3810; (o) tel:388-8471; (o) fax:388-5855
- -------------------------------(new page)------------------------------------
-
-
-
- PETITION
-
- To: The President of the United States of America
-
- Petitioners:
-
- Richard and Holley Haymaker (and friends)
- 254 Nelson Drive
- Baton Rouge, LA 70808, USA
-
- Petition:
-
- To protest the easy availability of firearms in the United States
-
- This year we were privileged to be the host parents to a 16-year-old Japa-
- nese AFS exchange student, Yoshihiro Hattori, from Nagoya, Japan. Yoshi's
- planned year long stay with us was tragically cut short. At 8:30 on October
- 17, 1992, Yoshi and our son Webb were on their way to a Halloween party for
- exchange students in a quiet suburb of Baton Rouge. Dressed as a dancer and
- a hospital patient, without masks, they knocked on the door of the house
- that they believed to be correct. They were greeted by a woman who was ap-
- parently very frightened by the two boys. She closed the door and called to
- her husband. Meanwhile Yoshi and Webb realized it was the wrong house and
- returned to the sidewalk when the woman's husband emerged from the carport
- with a .44 magnum handgun. Yoshi moved back toward the house saying 'we are
- here for the party'. The man shouted to the boys to 'freeze'. We believe
- Yoshi did not understand or realize the danger he was in and continued to
- move toward the man; Webb calling to him from the sidewalk to come back. The
- man shot Yoshi in the left chest at close range. Yoshi died minutes later.
- The 30 year old homeowner, claiming the killing was in self defense, was
- subsequently charged with manslaughter by a Baton Rouge grand jury.
-
- Yoshihiro's tragic death begs us to look at our country through the eyes of
- others, to ask how a democracy at peace can be so violent, to ask how a
- nation so blessed with diversity and riches can live in such fear. We can
- not help but ask what the man who shot Yoshi would have done had he not had
- a gun in his home. Together, fear and guns are a deadly combination.
-
- We grieve for this young man, our host son. We grieve for his natural fami-
- ly in Japan. He was a cherished human being. We ought to grieve as well
- for our nation where fear and violence breed too many tragedies each day. In
- Japan, where gun ownership is almost non-existent, it is particularly diffi-
- cult to understand Yoshi's senseless death. Here, we may understand it, but
- we must not accept it as inevitable. We remain one of the most heavily
- armed nations in the world, a nation that apparently has greater cause to
- fear aggression from our own citizens than it has cause to fear aggression
- from outside enemies.
-
- We call upon the President of the United States to reassess the easy
- availability of guns in this country and, in so doing, help prevent the
- thousands of similar incidents or accidents that will, no doubt, occur in
- the future.
-
- We the undersigned, support this petition in memory of Yoshi and in the hope
- that his death will not be in vain.
-
- PLEASE MAIL COMPLETED PETITIONS TO :
- Richard and Holley Haymaker, PO BOX 14839, Baton Rouge, LA 70898, USA
-
- ---------------------------(new page)-----------------------------------------
-
- PETITION TO PROTEST THE EASY AVAILABILITY OF FIREARMS IN THE UNITED STATES
-
- COUNTRY OF SIGNATURES: ________________________________
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