Madame Hiria Kojtari: The First Monday Back In School

Gonna post twice today, that is, this and the Ficly. I never brag about my writing, but this is powerful. Maybe just to me, but if I was going to cry, this was going to do it. Please read.

The gang (my French class) probably noticed that I didn’t share any memories of our teacher, Madame Hiria Kojtari, today. That’s just because I can never find the right words in the moment. As soon as my fingers hit a keyboard though, I’m good to go.

I thought today was going to be much easier than it was. Mme. Kojtari’s French V class met yesterday for Pizza that no one ate. A whole pie and all eight people could do was look, but other than that sobering moment in the pizzeria, it was a fairly entertaining outing. Jake fought with Natalie which added an air of normalcy to the gathering, and we all managed to avoid the subject of our teacher. I don’t know how we pulled that off.

I wrongly assumed that our get-together would be an indicator of how we would fare come Monday. Today, dressed in black, we all headed to a lecture hall which was serving as a temporary place of grieving. It was too weird skipping class to stay with my friends. Could I have gone to my classes? Maybe. I knew I didn’t want to talk to any of my friends who weren’t involved with the situation or who were still blissfully unaware because their ignorance would only serve to anger me. Granted, that isn’t a fair way to treat my friends, but I avoided most of them, so perhaps they won’t ever know what I’ve been through.

In Room 130, the lecture hall, a “crisis team” from the district education center was there to offer help, and I couldn’t have hated them more. Crazy how I so vehemently wanted them to leave when all they were doing was trying to help. It felt like they had walked into the situation expecting to make a difference. I wanted them to get the fuck out of my face, but I smiled a waved like a drone.

Our principal who has a tendency for speaking for too long had nothing to say. He spoke for two minutes and when he got a knot in his throat, the girls lost it. Sitting in front of Jake, Iram, and I, a row of our friends cried their hearts out. None of the guys shed a tear.

I signed the massive sheet referencing our failure to form a decent circle with our desks when she would ask at the beginning of each period. “I’m sorry we couldn’t get our desks in a circle, but I think out L-shape was pretty spiffy. Maybe some day I’ll learn the subjunctive tense.”

Jake drew a picture she would always draw to explain reflexive verbs. The caption read, “Be reflexive, please come back.”

Still doesn’t make any sense that this could have happened to our Madame Kojtari. I told a friend on Facebook that I wish there were words for how I feel, but instead I’m stuck referencing how surprised I am.

The song playing on my computer right now “Thank you for the inspiration/ thank you for the smiles/ thank you for the unconditional love.” Is this a joke? How much more apropos could it get?

The day continued. There was debate as to whether or not we would have the courage to go to the classroom come period 8. I voted yes. We all ended up going. Alina said we should put our desks in a circle. It ended up in the shape of an “L” anyway. I guess we’ll never get that right.

Well. She wasn’t there. She was gone and we all knew it because we weren’t reading Voltaire’s “Candide.” We were dressed in black, some weeping, some watching others cry.

One of the crisis counselors came in and Alina asked indirectly for her to leave. Ashley wanted to play French Monopoly like we had the previous Thursday. Why? Because we asked, and Madame K couldn’t find a reason not to break the rules a bit.

We got three turns into the game of monopoly today. The girls cried and I held a friend just waiting for the situation to blow away suddenly, maybe in the same way Hiria Kojtari up’d and left us.

At lunch my best friend Nick greeted me tactfully. He didn’t bring it up, and did me a huge favor by not saying anything about what I was going through. Makes me remember why he really is my best friend. I said goodbye to go sit with the class in the middle of a sea of loud kids, who were none the wiser. Natalie was crying again, and when Jake gave her a quick hug, I thought I was going to loose it.

We regrouped at the end of the day to listen to the principle deliver a brief explanation over the PA out of a sense of duty, but he could never have done her justice in twenty seconds. He used words like “passed away” instead of “murder”. He is the consummate professional, and I appreciate the way he handled the situation, but it felt like everyone then knew why my friends and I were in black, but no one understood the nature of the beast.

Well, at least my friend and classmate, Iram, looked good in black. When we walked to the bus in the rain, I kept telling him that I would spend thousands on a camera if it meant I could get him at that moment: Black tie, black shirt, black shoes, black slacks, five o’clock shadow like a man who hadn’t slept in days, glasses, and a walk he and I shared like we’d just lost our best friend.

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Madame Kojtari

Short article about my French Teacher.

Hello everyone… out there, wherever that is.

Normally I write fiction, and it usually involves a little bit of brutality because that’s what makes a story intense, but it also moves it an inch or two away from reality. Stories about murders are often uncomfortable to read, even when you know it’s fiction.

I’m sitting here behind my keyboard trying to be as poetic and profound as I always try to be, but I’m finding it impossible. I’ve got a boat load of friends on facebook right now who don’t really understand how to feel. I guess I should be clear.

On the way home from Sam Ash Music in New York City, I got a text message from a friend of mine asking if I’d heard the news. Well, no. I hadn’t. Apparently my French teacher of three years had been murdered in her home in Newburgh alongside her husband. So said Recordonline.com. I got all the information second hand from friends and spent the next hour in the car next to my mother wondering how to tell her. If she freaked out, it would mean I was going to also, and I didn’t want to.

Telling her, she was fairly horrified, and I asked her if it was alright that I just slam a pair of earbuds into my ears and ignore the world until we got home. She touched my head comfortingly, but I didn’t want it. I just wanted to pretend like I was invisible, which might not be totally original or inspired, but it’s fucking true.

I sat staring out the window drumming along quietly to a few songs trying to think about my new cymbals in the back seat that I was incredibly grateful for but couldn’t give a shit about at that moment. My dad was waiting in front of the house when we got back, but he didn’t know yet. He asked about my cymbals, and I acted the crap out of a brief role I can only describe as “Zen”. I didn’t smile, I didn’t frown, and my mom waited until I was inside to tell my father, because I couldn’t bear breaking the news twice.

I’m still having trouble processing it. My friend Jake who always has something smart to say doesn’t want to talk. My friends Alex and Iram who always seem to be calm are flipping out. Several of the girls in our 12 student level 5 french class have cried themselves to the point of headache, and none of us really know how to react, or if meeting up tomorrow at the local pizza joint is going to help.

Ever have that dream where something tragic happens to your school, whether you be a graduate or not, and all you see are people crying? I hope everyone cries, or at least everyone knows. Speaking with Ashley from French on Facebook a matter of minutes ago, neither of us knew if we’ll be able to walk into room 151 or 173 or whatever the fuck it is on Monday. I keep seeing police crime tape wrapped around the door to the classroom which is horrifically ironic because just this morning I peeled off a strip of crime scene tape from the door to my bedroom, having grown tired of it.

My mom is knocking on my door asking if I want something to eat. Funny how helpless I feel.

Jake’s status on facebook read something about wishing he had been a better french student.
Melissa’s status read “R.I.p mme. Kojtari. I’ll remember you forever.”
My status just read, “Oh man…”

For all the dumb jokes about Madame Kojitari that Jake and I told each other, and for all the stupid things we did in class, she was an awesome person to be around. I never liked her teaching, and I won’t pretend to now, but I grew to love her because more than any other teacher I’ve ever had, she was a real class mom, and almost always lead her class as a democracy.

I don’t have anything else to say, so I’ll just leave it at that.

Peace. Leave a nice comment, it’ll help.

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