Kane Williamson will captain the T20 World Cup squad for a fourth time as New Zealand hunt for a maiden title
Sabika Aziz Sheikh's father, three siblings and cousin entered the Santa Fe High School art classroom where the 17-year-old was shot as she hid with other students in a storage closet. Her mother, Farah Naz, couldn't bring herself to take the final steps into the room, explaining in Urdu through an interpreter that the image "would stay with me ... throughout my whole life."
Although the family knew their two-week visit to the Houston area would be difficult, they felt Sabika would have wanted them to make the trip from Karachi, which also allowed them to personally thank people for their support, particularly residents of Santa Fe.
"We're still trying to grapple with the puzzle pieces, what her final moments were for her. The thought of it is so traumatizing," said Sabika's cousin Shaheera Jalil Albasit, who served as the family's interpreter during an interview Wednesday with The Associated Press. Although Albasit came to Santa Fe right after the shooting, it is the first visit for the rest of the family.
In addition to visiting the school, they met with Sabika's Santa Fe host family and with the prosecutors handling the case against the student charged with carrying out the attack. They also plan to meet with family members of other shooting victims.
"I knew this was going to be hard, but I had to do it," Sania Aziz Sheikh, Sabika's 15-year-old sister, said about visiting Santa Fe. Also on the trip were her 11-year-old sister, Soha, and her 14-year old brother, Ali.
Sabika, seven other students and two teachers were killed in the May 18, 2018, attack at the school, which is about 55 miles (88 kilometers) southeast of Houston. Thirteen other people were wounded. The student accused in the attack, 18-year-old Dimitrios Pagourtzis, is scheduled to stand trial in January on state murder charges. He also faces federal charges.
Sabika came to Santa Fe, a city of about 13,000 residents, through a federal program in which high school students from countries with significant Muslim populations study in the US.
Her father, Abdul Aziz, said it was important to tour Sabika's school and learn about her life there. On Tuesday, the family was given a tour of the campus, which was empty because of the summer break.
With Sabika's schedule in hand, they went from classroom to classroom and sat where she once did. They eventually went to the art room, where the family members who ventured inside sat on the floor where Sabika died and were able to more or less envision what her final moments looked like, Albasit said.
Sabika was less than three weeks from returning home when she was killed.
Sania said she took comfort in learning from one of Sabika's friends that she had been "very happy" the night before the shooting.
Abdul Aziz, 52, who works as a distributor of cosmetics and plastic products in Pakistan, said despite what happened, he "feels very positively" about the US and Santa Fe. But he and his wife said they had been unaware of the prevalence of gun violence in the US.
Albasit said that although Sabika's parents are confident Pagourtzis will be convicted, finding justice for Sabika would require more of a systemic change in US gun violence.
"No matter what happens, it's not going to bring back my daughter. But that will give me some sense of peace," said Naz, 45.
Albasit, 27, who recently finished graduate school in Washington, D.C., became active in the gun control movement following her cousin's death.
"She's here in everything we do. That is not going to change," he said.
Kane Williamson will captain the T20 World Cup squad for a fourth time as New Zealand hunt for a maiden title
Vehicle owners must bring their old plates along to the inspection station
Clean sweep for UAE in golf as the hosts win team gold and Rayan claims individual title
Silva announced his farewell on Monday in an emotional video message on Chelsea's website
Protest organizers deny accusations of anti-Semitism, arguing that their actions are aimed at the Israeli government
Images published on the weekend showed Bollywood superstar actor Shah Rukh Khan sweating profusely while watching his team train