Delia Bloom and Adam Jensen were in kindergarten and first grade, respectively, when Matthew Shepard died, 11 years ago today.
The two students at the Blake School, a private school in Minneapolis, didn't hear at the time about the murder of Shepard, a gay, 21-year-old University of Wyoming student whose brutal beating became an international story highlighting violence and hate crimes against gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people.
But they know about it now.
"It's so shocking that anything like that could happen," said Bloom, a junior.
Bloom and Jensen are part of a 14-person cast at Blake that will participate tonight in a nationwide reading of "The Laramie Project: 10 Years Later." Though arguably a sequel at 80 minutes, it's billed as an "epilogue" to the famous "Laramie Project" play that tells the story of Shepard's murder through the voices of Laramie residents.
Blake is the only high school in Minnesota and one of only nine high schools in the United States that is taking on the reading. The Guthrie is also doing a reading tonight.
"I care about how students and people are affected by hate crimes," said Diane Landis, the theater director at Blake, "and Matthew Shepard has become a symbol of that. The thing about the Laramie Project is that it's not just one voice. It's the voices of the people of Laramie."
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