Youth Mentor Urges Unity, Action After Downtown Montgomery Mass Shooting
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (WAKA) — The founder of a Montgomery youth mentorship organization is calling on the community to come together and help guide young people following the mass shooting downtown Saturday night.
Charles Lee, who founded That’s My Child and operates the restaurant That’s My Dog, said the tragedy underscores the urgent need for mentorship and community involvement. His organizations help local youth develop life and job skills, offering them positive alternatives to violence.
Lee was working his hot dog stand on Commerce Street during the shooting, alongside two high school students — Jamarion Ware and Chanelly Cunningham — who were helping him that night.
“Out of nowhere, I’m grilling hot dogs and we hear two shots,” Ware said. “Mr. Lee is on the side of me helping out, and we were wondering, what is that?”
The three took cover behind the hot dog cart as gunfire continued.
“Mr. Lee and I ran over there behind the cart and we laid down on the ground,” Cunningham said.
“As we’re on the ground, we’re still hearing bullets hit cars,” Lee added.
Ware said the scene quickly turned chaotic. “I saw people crying, hiding and running, and there were kids out here. They had their kids with them trying to find cover.”
As people fled, the group became separated.
“I had to leave one to see if the other one was OK,” Lee said. “I didn’t even think about him still being over there scared and left alone, but I just knew that Jamarion ran off and there was still gunfire. I just wanted to make sure he didn’t get hit.”
Ware said the experience left a lasting impact. “That night when I got home, I prayed. I got down on my knees and thanked God for saving me because people lost their lives and were seriously hurt. I was just so thankful to still be alive.”
But the heaviness of what happened has lingered.
“I’ve got a lot of paranoia. I like to check behind my back every now and then,” said Cunningham. “I don’t like being in large crowds.”
Lee said both students are still processing the trauma. “They told me, ‘Mr. Lee, I never want to go back downtown. I don’t want to go to the fair. I don’t want to do anything that involves a lot of people.’ You can just tell it’s messed with their minds.”
Lee is urging adults across Montgomery to get involved with organizations like That’s My Child to help mentor and support young people dealing with trauma and community violence.
“People are saying, how do we help our youth? We’ve been doing this for 18 years,” Lee said. “We welcome people to join us and mentor a young person. Some of these kids are traumatized by gunfire — and it’s not just Saturday night. In our neighborhood, they hear gunshots every night. They’re used to losing friends.”
Lee said healing the city will require setting aside divisions and focusing on real solutions.
“We’ve got to find common ground and come together because that’s what this city needs,” he said. “All that political stuff, all that white and Black stuff — that’s out the window. The only people I saw dying when I turned that corner were young Black kids, everywhere.”
Currently, 86 students are enrolled in That’s My Child programs, where they learn job skills and personal development. Lee said the organization is always in need of adult volunteers.
To learn more or sign up to mentor, visit thatsmychildmgm.org.