ToughGong. Posted July 22, 2012 Out of the frying pan into the fire comes to mind Jessica Ghawi wrote a month ago on her blog how "an odd feeling" compelled her to leave Toronto's Eaton Centre right before a gunman opened fire in the food court, killing two. If she had the same feeling just after midnight in a theatre in a Denver suburb, she had no time to act on it. The 24-year-old aspiring sportscaster from Texas was among the 12 victims in one of the worst mass shootings in U.S. history. Ghawi was remembered by friends and colleagues as an ambitious, smart, funny young woman determined to make it in sports journalism. Ghawi, who used the name Jessica Redfield professionally, tweeted about her excitement leading up to the premiere of The Dark Knight rises. "MOVIE DOESN'T START FOR 20 MINUTES," she tweeted to a friend she'd been teasing for not going to the premiere. Not long after that, according to her brother, she was shot in the leg before being shot fatally in the head. Brent Lowak, who was sitting beside her at the theatre, told Ghawi's brother from his hospital bed that they dove for cover when the suspect opened fire. "Brent noticed that Jessica was no longer screaming. He advised that he looked over to Jessica and saw what appeared to be an entry wound to her head," Jordan Ghawi wrote on his blog Friday. In an eerie coincidence, Ghawi's last entry on her personal blog was about witnessing the aftermath of the shooting in the Eaton Centre on June 2 that left two people dead and five others wounded. She was in Toronto to visit her boyfriend, Jay Meloff, a hockey player from Markham, Ont. She had grabbed a burger and poutine in the food court but "an odd feeling" that led her outside, she wrote. "Gun crimes are fairly common where I grew up in Texas, but I never imagined I'd experience a violent crime first hand," she wrote on June 5. Watching ambulances arrive and stretchers carry people out, she wrote: "That's when it really hit me. I felt nauseous. Who would go into a mall full of thousands of innocent people and open fire? Is this really the world we live in? "I was shown how fragile life was on Saturday," she wrote a few days after the shooting. "I was reminded that we don't know when or where our time on Earth will end." Adrian Dater, a sports columnist at the Denver Post said on his blog Friday that Ghawi was "very smart and very funny," and said she'd never forget what she saw in Toronto. "She said something to the effect that if she'd been in a certain spot just a minute before, she likely would have been one of the victims," he wrote. "She talked about how lucky she was." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nin-Yaaban Posted July 22, 2012 Ninkaas hal mar hala dilo. Wax faa'ido ah uu hada dadka ku kordhin karo majirto. Lacag, Jail, iyo Maxkamad yaanan lagu khasaarin ee banaanka hala geeyo, oo halaga takhaluso. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Aaliyyah Posted July 22, 2012 This is unfortunate incident. The scariest part being the killer was an educated man doing his PHD and not a man who had a trouble with the law. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Coofle Posted July 22, 2012 Qof sigtay ma noola.... Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar Posted July 22, 2012 Tsk, tsk, with all this American and other Galbeed media hoopla, I am missing the maroodi in the qol word. Hint: it starts with big t. Had this shooter had any name that remotely or closely sounded like a "Muslim" name or if he was non-white immigrant, sheekada meesha lala aadi lahaa waala ogyahay. Now, it is always demented, deranged, lonely person. As always. And as long as hubkaan Mareykanka -- any kind of it -- legal ka yahay, someone will always go 'postal.' I don't understand when will they wake up and ban hub dhan altogether. Constitution, constitution ku haayaan as though their constitution was a divine decree that was sent down on a stone. Why would any country allow any of its citizens legally acquire AK-47 and the likes. it gets me. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
GaraadMon Posted July 22, 2012 @Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar. I'm pretty sure the Virginia Tech Shooter (of Korean descent) was referred to as being a deranged gunman. I do believe there is a bias surrounding Muslim vs Non-Muslim terrorism cases but I think the Oslo Massacre and Fort Hood shooting should be compared instead. There hasn't been any evidence to suggest that there was any political/religious ideology behind this. Also, I find it rather ridiculous that some are using this mass shooting to play the victim card. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
5 Posted July 22, 2012 Sad. Also poor Chris Nolan, TDK was surrounded by Heath Ledger's death and now this. But you know what's even worse? The folks at WB are more shocked by the lowered grosses due to the shooting, as TDKR had a shot of beating Marvel's The Avengers weekend record. It's a cold world we're living in. Miskiin, haduu madow ahaan lahaa booliiska probably would have shot him in the parking lot in the name of self-defence. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites