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A Creative Teenager Mourned, Celebrated

Escaping Violence Was Play's Theme

Xiomara Lopez of Bell Multicultural High breaks into tears as she reads a poem written for slain student Edwin Ventura. With her is Wendy Nogales.
Xiomara Lopez of Bell Multicultural High breaks into tears as she reads a poem written for slain student Edwin Ventura. With her is Wendy Nogales. (Photos By Lois Raimondo -- The Washington Post)
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By Elissa Silverman
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Edwin B. Ventura, a senior at Bell Multicultural High School, thought so much about escaping the violence of his Northwest Washington neighborhood that he wrote a play about it.

Ventura's play, "Moving Out," has a scene in which a character is shot by a masked robber. He survives, and the family moves on to a safer place.

Ventura wasn't as fortunate.

The 18-year-old was shot and killed April 22 while standing with friends near Columbia Road and Sherman Avenue NW in Columbia Heights.

Last night, at the Busboys and Poets restaurant, about 10 blocks from where Ventura was shot, actors -- including a few of Bell's classmates -- performed his play and recited poetry that had inspired the teenager.

The tribute was organized by the Young Playwrights' Theater, which sponsors a program at Bell to teach playwriting to 11th-graders.

Violence and its effect on family life were recurring themes in Ventura's writing, although he seemed to express optimism that he would not be ensnared by it.

In a college application essay that was read aloud last night, he wrote about a cousin who lived with Ventura's family. The cousin had been shot and later was sought by police as a suspect in a murder. Ventura witnessed his mother's anguish over the situation and vowed not to emulate his cousin.

"Even though I grew up in a bad neighborhood, I still grew up knowing what is right and wrong," he wrote in the essay. "I always tried to make good decisions in life -- like trying not to get into drugs or gangs."

The teenager's view of Columbia Heights as a "bad" neighborhood and a place to escape was a point of reflection for several members of the audience, including D.C. Council member Jim Graham (D-Ward 1), who represents the area.

Graham said later that gang activity among Latino youths in the neighborhood is "below the radar" for most residents until a violent incident on a city street puts them in harm's way.

Marina Iraheta, a Bell classmate of Ventura's who attended last night's performance, said she is concerned about gang activity and violence in Columbia Heights.


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