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What 'Don't Worry, I'll Keep You Safe' Means When Your Child Survives A Shooting

Alan Stepakoff (left) and his son Josh at StoryCorps in Los Angeles.
Courtesy of StoryCrops
Alan Stepakoff (left) and his son Josh at StoryCorps in Los Angeles.

Josh Stepakoff was 6 years old in 1999, when a white supremacist opened fire on his day camp at the North Valley Jewish Community Center in Los Angeles.

Josh was shot in his leg and hip. The gunman wounded four others, and shot and killed another man a few miles away. The shooting was ruled a federal hate crime, and the gunman is serving life in prison.

"I remember playing capture the flag and I looked up and I saw somebody who was holding something at his hip. I thought it was a power drill," Josh, now 24, tells his father, Alan, at StoryCorps. "And then, the next thing I remember is getting up from the ground and running as fast as I could."

Alan Stepakoff and his son, Josh, in Washington, D.C., for the Million Mom March rally in May 2000, the year after Josh was shot at his Jewish day camp.
/ Courtesy of Joshua Stepakoff
/
Courtesy of Joshua Stepakoff
Alan Stepakoff and his son, Josh, in Washington, D.C., for the Million Mom March rally in May 2000, the year after Josh was shot at his Jewish day camp.

Alan, a 64-year-old father of two, remembers what started off as a normal day of parenting — dropping kids off at camp — ended up in a hospital room with his son. The gunman's "picture was on the TV, and you looked up at it and you said, 'That's the shooter,' " Alan tells his son.

He remembers that right after the shooting Josh was scared of helicopter sounds and loud noises.

"There definitely was not any manual of how to deal with this as a parent," Alan tells his son. "I don't know whether you remember, I took you to a Civil War reenactment, and when the cannons started firing, you jumped in my arms and we got in the car and drove as far away as we could."

"I think it was hard for me to wrap my head around the fact that this was not normal," Josh says. "I thought everyone had a hard time sleeping over. I thought everyone had hard times in the dark."

One of the most difficult things for Alan, he says, was he could never assure Josh he could protect him.

"You know, I could never put my arms around you and say 'Don't worry, Josh, I'll keep you safe,' because I couldn't. I just thank God every day you weren't killed," he says. "I don't know whether you've ever envisioned yourself as a family man, married, children. Would you tell this to your child?"

"I go back and forth with that. I think about it a lot," Josh says. "I think about my child's 6th birthday and what that will be like for me. I don't know."

Josh has a bachelor's degree in psychology and is now in graduate school working on his master's in clinical psychology. Does he see himself counseling other shooting victims?

"Half of me says yes and half of me says no, partially because I almost think that I won't be able to differentiate my life from theirs," Josh says. "But nobody tells you what to expect after getting shot, and so the other part of me just so badly wants to be a light in someone's life when they think it's dark."

Audio produced for Morning Edition by Liyna Anwar.

StoryCorps is a national nonprofit that gives people the chance to interview friends and loved ones about their lives. These conversations are archived at the American Folklife Center at the Library of Congress, allowing participants to leave a legacy for future generations. Learn more, including how to interview someone in your life, at StoryCorps.org.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Corrected: November 10, 2017 at 12:00 AM EST
A previous version of the Web story said a 1999 shooting took place at the Los Angeles Jewish Community Center. In fact, it happened at the North Valley Jewish Community Center.