FLORISSANT, Missouri — The first day of school at McCluer High began with hugs and high-fives on Monday, as religious groups and community members welcomed students who returned to their classrooms desperate for a sense of normalcy.
“I almost got tears because this is so very beautiful,” Maurtaisha Mayo, a senior at McCluer, said of the groups cheering on the students as she dabbed her ring finger under her eyes. McCluer is part of the Ferguson-Florissant school district, which serves students in both communities.
Students here had to grow up a little bit faster in the last two weeks after Michael Brown, a former student at McCluer, was shot and killed by a white police officer in broad daylight on Aug. 9. Brown’s death, and the crowds of protests that ensued, delayed school for students for more than a week. Since classes were originally supposed to start on Aug. 14, students have had to set aside their new clothes and textbooks as the entire community waited for the unrest to subside.
“If this man Darren Wilson doesn’t get justice, I know it’ll be a very hard time for Ferguson,” 15-year-old Mayo said of Brown’s shooter.
Corinna Ousley stood in the parking lot, coaxing her son to pose for a picture up against the family’s car on his first day of high school.
The school delays have hit parents like Ousley especially hard. For the parents and guardians, finding two extra weeks of childcare for their youngsters puts a strain on family’s finances. Acknowledging the gap, the school district offered free lunches for the kids who would ordinarily rely on schools to feed them during the day. And a fundraising drive kicked off by a North Carolina teacher has raised more than $150,000 in financial assistance to help feed the kids in Ferguson.
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“It really helped out that they offered the lunches,” Ousley said with a sigh of relief.
“It’s kind of scary. I still don’t know what to teach them,” Ousley said of her three kids. “Police are supposed to be in place to protect them.”
Across town, thousands flooded around the Friendly Temple Missionary Baptist Church in St. Louis where mourners gathered to honor the slain teen. A Cardinals baseball cap laid Brown’s closed casket as family members, residents and celebrities came to say their final goodbyes.
The schools in the district are bringing in counselors to help the students be able to process Brown’s death and the greater meaning it has had on the community. Students were out of school during the height of violence and unrest in the city, when armored vehicles lined the streets and flumes of tear gas filled the air on more nights than not.









