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The rumors targeted Haitians. All of Springfield is paying the price.

On Friday, the second graders in Lisa Pankratz’s class in Springfield, Ohio, were supposed to practice taking measurements, read a story about a chameleon desiring a color of his own, and attend gym class.

Instead, teachers at Snowhill Elementary School were rounding up students who had already arrived and turning away others. A bomb threat tied to a rumor-turned-lie about the city’s growing Haitian immigrant population had forced an evacuation.

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Historians have long warned that people in the United States need to stop demonizing one another. The costs of acidic rhetoric are on display in Springfield, Ohio, where discredited rumors became a political football.

Residents like Ms. Pankratz feel disheartened. Frustrated, even.

“Why are adults pulling children into this?” she asks. “What do the lives of children have to do with politics?”

Dozens of bomb threats have escalated safety concerns in this Midwestern city. Multiple schools and city buildings have been evacuated, and residents interviewed talk about a simmering sense of unease and daily life disrupted. In a nutshell, Springfield has come under verbal siege.

The city is a parable of the effects that coarsening political discourse has had on U.S. society. Long decried by historians as corrosive, once unleashed, politicized hatred cannot be contained within its banks. And, as Springfield shows, it hurts everyone. 

At Snowhill, the chaos and fear have stymied learning, but one thing has not changed: Ms. Pankratz continues telling her students, including two Haitian children, that she loves them.

It’s a message she wants the city’s youngest members to grow up hearing.

It was a day of scrapped lesson plans.

On Friday, the second graders in Lisa Pankratz’s class in Springfield, Ohio, were supposed to practice taking measurements, read a story about a chameleon desiring a color of his own, and attend their favorite special – gym class.

Instead, before the school day officially began, teachers at Snowhill Elementary School were rounding up students who had already arrived and turning away others whose parents were dropping them off. A bomb threat tied to a rumor-turned-lie about the city’s growing Haitian immigrant population had forced an evacuation. Ms. Pankratz addressed it delicately.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Historians have long warned that people in the United States need to stop demonizing one another. The costs of acidic rhetoric are on display in Springfield, Ohio, where discredited rumors became a political football.

“What do you notice? … What do you wonder?” she asked. 

Her students offered their observations and questions. So as Ms. Pankratz helped the little ones board a bus bound for the high school, she shared what she could.

“Snowhill is not safe for us to be in right now,” she told them. “We need to go to a place that is safe for you. And remember: My No. 1 job is to keep you safe.”

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