Health and Wellness
Runner dedicates New York City Marathon to preventing gun violence
Like the 50,000 other individuals who lined the starting line of the New York City Marathon on November 3, Trevon Bosley of Chicago was prepared to push his body to the limit over the 26.2-mile distance. Unlike them though Bosley dedicated his run to deceased relations and preventing the gun violence that took their lives.
Bosley’s cousin, Vincent Avant, was shot to death on a street near his family’s home in 2005, according to NBC News.
Then in 2021, Bosley’s brother, 18-year-old Terrell, was fatally shot outside the Lights of Zion Church in Chicago’s West Pullman neighborhood.
“It really shook up everything in the family,” Bosley told NBC News. The family stopped celebrating holidays and even listening to music. “We only started to find relief through preventive measures.”
Bosley was a mentor for the Chicago organization Bold Resistance Against Violence Everywhere (BRAVE), which organizes talent shows, basketball tournaments and other programs. This work led him to meet with victims of the 2018 Parkland, Florida, school shooting, where he shared stories about his group members’ experiences with gun violence in Chicago.
The Parkland school shooting ultimately led to the creation of March For Our Lives, a gun violence advocacy group founded by youth survivors of the shooting, of which Bosley is now co-chair.
Bosley told NBC News that to help him cope with the aftermath of his brother’s death, he took up running.
“I needed something to calm me down and take my mind off it,” he said. “I’ve heard people say that they find running relaxing and that it helps them.” Bosley said that running frequently “really started to clear my head and it just had a positive effect on me.”
Bosley participated within the New York City Marathon as a part of a bunch of runners representing Team Inspire, a bunch of 26 runners with various levels of marathon experience facilitated by the marathon organizing group, New York Road Runners.
While his thoughts were on his brother in the course of the race, his pre-race thoughts were also on Chicago, which has develop into embedded within the national imagination as a spot where gun violence is rampant.
Although gun violence has declined in recent times, Bosley said gun violence in Chicago is due to “many problems,” including an absence of funding for education for the town’s youth, an absence of workforce programs and an influx of weapons from friendly nations weapons.
“Indiana is only a 15-minute drive,” Bosley told NBC News. “So we have all these other issues that we’re trying to reduce in our community, and now we’re dealing with a flood of guns. This has caused the gun violence we see in Chicago.”
According to a 2022 research paper published in , Chicago is one among the cities where social violence interventionists are used.
In 2022, the town spent $50 million on these programs along side the $5 billion national commitment for community violence intervention programs under President Joe Biden’s Build Back Better Act.