My son was killed by gun violence; I don’t want other mothers to feel that pain

ETERNAL FLAME—Connie Moore, center, lights a candle with her granddaughter, Dejah Davis, left, and Davis’ sister, Kadiera Jones, in memory of her slain son, Hosea Davis.
ETERNAL FLAME—Connie Moore, center, lights a candle with her granddaughter, Dejah Davis, left, and Davis’ sister, Kadiera Jones, in memory of her slain son, Hosea Davis.

I try to be strong for my Mothers with a Voice group that I’m in, but my son is the reason I’m out here on this pavement every day, trying to save somebody else’s child, so they don’t have to join my group. I don’t want to keep comforting another mother. I don’t want to be holding you up. I don’t want your child to be a victim.
If you haven’t lost a child, you don’t know the pain. The pain is like a knife digging in your heart.
I sit and look at mothers, and I still say to this day, “It’s not your fault.”
Because I know I raised my son good. But as my grandmother used to say, you can lead him to the water, but you can’t make him drink it. You can show him the road to go down, but you can’t make him take that road.
DADDY’S GIRLS—Hosea Davis’ daughters, Jadah Davis, 15, and Dajah Davis, 17, mourn the loss of their father at a Feb. 17 vigil with t-shirts containing his picture and the words “Love Ya Daddy.” (Photos by J.L. Martello)
DADDY’S GIRLS—Hosea Davis’ daughters, Jadah Davis, 15, and Dajah Davis, 17, mourn the loss of their father at a Feb. 17 vigil with t-shirts containing his picture and the words “Love Ya Daddy.” (Photos by J.L. Martello)

I cry all the time. All the time. I’m broken. The pain is unbearable. And I go deal with mothers all the time, and I talk to fathers. And yes, they do grieve differently, but they do grieve.
My son started the Fathers Who Care Foundation in 2012. He would get kids off the street, take them places, do things with them, give them cookouts down on Larimer Avenue, just so they’d have something to do. This was his dream.
And I said with every breath in me, it is going to be successful. I’m going to do everything I can, with any help that I can get to save these kids.
We need to help these kids out here because they’re lost. They don’t have a clue. The drugs have taken over. My son was killed over drugs. He wasn’t no goody-two-shoes guy, but he was my son. I know he was a good son. And a good person —he saved a girl who was being stabbed at the East Liberty Target in 2013. He was also a great father, and he was my best friend. And I lost all that.
When they called me on the phone, my uncle called me and said, “Your son has been killed.” I hung the phone up.
“You ain’t talkin’ about my son. Cause he’s on the way to my house. He told me to get dressed. Cause we was going to eat.”
And that was like a half hour before I got this call.
I hung the phone up. It rung again. He said, “Connie, they killed Hosea.”
PRAYER FOR PEACE—Connie Moore, the mother of slain Hosea Davis, prays for peace and the capture of her son’s killer at a vigil on Feb. 17 in Larimer. (Photo by J.L. Martello)
PRAYER FOR PEACE—Connie Moore, the mother of slain Hosea Davis, prays for peace and the capture of her son’s killer at a vigil on Feb. 17 in Larimer. (Photo by J.L. Martello)

I just looked up and said “God, I’m not going to ask you why. I’m going to ask you to help me. Cause this one’s hard.”
I got in my car and I drove down there, and my son was laying on the ground. The man arrested for Hosea’s murder is serving a 20-year sentence for dealing. He hasn’t yet been tried for my son’s death.
I want to help whoever wants to be helped. And I want to help those who don’t want to be helped.
I want to help whoever wants to be helped. And I want to help those who don’t want to be helped.
My son always said, “You’re the strongest woman that I ever met.” And I’m gonna keep that moving. Cause I want him to know that I have not given up on him. So, with that, I just want to say thank you to God for the strength he has given me to go to the schools and talk to the kids.
I want justice. I don’t want revenge. And that’s what I think we all want out here.
We want justice for our sons and our daughters and our grandkids.
My granddaughter is 4 years old, and she says to me, “My dad’s in heaven…’cause the bad man shot him.”
Four years old. Should a 4-year-old be saying that? They’re supposed to be watching Minnie Mouse or Mickey Mouse on TV. Doing some ABCs.
Let’s save our kids.
One person, one community can’t do it. It’s going to take all of us to come together to do it. I’m here. I want to help, and I need help. Nobody can do it on their own.
(Connie Moore is vice president of Mothers with a Voice and the president of the Fathers Who Care Foundation, which her son started in 2012 to provide youth outreach. She can be reached at 412-362-9396 or fwcf1976@gmail.com.)
 
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