Remembering Terrell and Tariq
Two fathers build monuments to their murdered sons by refusing to hate the killers
May / June 2004
Jacqueline White and Jon Spayde Utne magazine
How does a peace activist respond when, a dozen years after
brokering a historic truce between gang leaders in Watts, his own
son is shot in the back and killed, an innocent casualty of
apparent gang terror? How does a hopeful immigrant who fled
oppression react when his son is murdered in 'safe' America?
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For Aqeela Sherrills, founder of the Community
Self-Determination Institute, which provides conflict mediation,
literacy training, and arts programming in Watts, California, the
cold-blooded murder of his 18-year-old son, Terrell, has only
strengthened his resolve to forgo the lethal culture of revenge.
And for immigrant Azim Khamisa, forgiveness extended to partnering
with the grandfather of his son's killer to run a San Diego
foundation that teaches nonviolence and peaceful problem-solving in
schools.
Terrell Sherrills, a first-year student at Humboldt State
University, was murdered after attending a party in Los Angeles'
typically quiet Ladera Heights neighborhood in January. Homicide
detective Martin Rodriguez told a reporter for L.A.
Weekly (Jan. 23, 2004) that 'the only thing we can think
as far as a motive is that Terrell wore a red sweater in a
predominately blue or Crip gang area.' In a letter to Utne, Aqeela
Sherrills explained why his son was sporting the red Mickey Mouse
sweater: Terrell liked Mickey regalia because, like the famous
mouse, he had big ears.
'It's not about who killed my son, but what is killing our
children,' Sherrills wrote Utne. While punishment is certainly in
order, says Sherrills, so is answering a pressing but often
overlooked question: What would cause a young man such inner pain
that he would be driven to kill? Sherrills hopes to find the answer
by someday meeting Terrell's killer (so far no one has been
arrested for the crime) and the killer's parents.