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Orlando June 2016 shooting

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Author(s)

Rebecca Chopp

Letter  •

To: All ¿ì»îapp students, faculty and staff

The ¿ì»îapp mourns the lives lost and forever changed by the massacre at Pulse, a gay nightclub in Orlando, this past weekend during the club's Latin Night. We are united in solidarity with the victims and their families and friends, the citizens of Orlando, the members of the colleges and universities many of these young victims attended, and with an America that is grappling with grief and outrage at this horrific act of violence against the LGBT community and attack against our democracy.

We strive to be an intentional community, one whose members are connected wherever they are. This week we are connected in sadness as well as support for one another. Our community may not have any known direct connections to victims of the massacre, yet we are all connected in expressions of our solidarity with Orlando:

  • We came together on the ¿ì»îapp campus on Monday, June 13, for a moment of silence and communal sharing of individual reactions to the Orlando massacre.ÌýÌýcapturing this moving event on our new Newsroom website.
  • ¿ì»îapp continues to add its voice with others in the Denver and Rocky Mountain community through sharing our campus events and expressing our support through the media. See ourÌý¿ì»îapp Pride portalÌýfor links and information.
  • On Tuesday, June 14,ÌýÌýrequesting that bells toll in unison at 6:30 p.m. MDT; the bell inside ¿ì»îapp’s Williams Carillon Tower rang 49 times, once for each of the victims in Orlando.
  • We join others in not letting this tragedy stop our resolve and our commitment to create a better place—here at ¿ì»îapp and across the world—where values such as integrity and inclusiveness lead to action. Many of our ¿ì»îapp community members are sharing their commitment to action through social media, using the Twitter hashtag #iwill¿ì»îappmore.

Beyond ¿ì»îapp and Denver, aÌýÌýby Carol Geary Schneider of the American Association of College and University Presidents connects the Orlando tragedy with others in our recent history and talks about the role higher education can play. As a member of the board of that group, I was pleased to be associated with the message.

Across the ¿ì»îapp, we will continue to promote the values of freedom, democracy and inclusion that represent the ideals of our nation—even though we have, as a nation and as an institution, not always realized those ideals.

I want to acknowledge and thank those who quickly took action as soon as the news of Orlando broke on Sunday to develop a response and bring our community together, with special thanks to Thomas Walker, who directs CME educational programs and LGBTIQA services, and who led efforts surrounding Monday’s event.

Looking ahead, we have opportunities to continue building more inclusiveness and awareness and respect for our rich differences, and to make our intentional community stronger. One opportunity is coming up this weekend, at theÌýDenver PrideFest. ¿ì»îapp will have a booth, our 10thÌýconsecutive year of participating in one of the nation’s largest Pride festivals.

Finally, I urge anyone who feels the need to do so to use the resources available to our ¿ì»îapp community members:

Campus Resources

·¡³¾±è±ô´Ç²â±ð±ð²õ:ÌýEmployee Assistance Program–303-871-2205
³§³Ù³Ü»å±ð²Ô³Ù²õ:ÌýHealth and Counseling Center–303-871-2205
¿ì»îapp LGBTIQ&Ally Services (non-counseling):Ìýwww.du.edu/prideÌý
All members of the University community:ÌýReligious and Spiritual LifeÌý– 303-871-4488

Sincerely,

Rebecca Chopp
Chancellor