After Memorial Day violence, children’s chess tournament offers necessary distraction
May 31, 2019, 2:44 PM | Updated: 2:52 pm

Detective Denise "Cookie" Bouldin watches on as 5th graders compete in her Urban Youth Chess Tournament at Van Asselt Elementary.
Hours after gunfire sent families fleeing at Seattle鈥檚 Pritchard Island Beach, a group of fifth graders sat face-to-face at the Van Asselt Elementary School Library.
Shootout injures 3, including baby, at South Seattle park
The 30 students were about a mile away from the Memorial Day mayhem. The shooting sent one of their peers, a ten-year-old girl, to the hospital. A 27-year-old mother and her ten-month-old son also got caught up in the gang crossfire.
Inside the library, a battle of the minds was about to begin.
鈥淭his is a good way to have the battle on the chess board. Not on the streets. Not somewhere else,鈥 said Seattle Police Detective Denise 鈥淐ookie鈥 Bouldin.
The 40-year-police veteran set up the Urban Youth Chess Tournament. It began with a moment of reflection.
鈥淪ome of you know some of the people that was hurt in that incident,鈥 said Detective Cookie. 鈥淟et鈥檚 take a few seconds just to say a silent wish that we鈥檙e wishing that they get good.鈥
Most of the students at the tournament are considered at-risk youth. They attend either Van Asselt or nearby South Shore, both Title I schools. Many live in poverty, some sleep at homeless shelters, and nearly all grow-up in high-crime areas, including near Pritchard Island Beach.
鈥淪ome of these kids right here, they use that park,鈥 said Detective Cookie. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e saying they鈥檙e afraid or had a dream that somebody shot them. These kids are living this and they are silently hurting.鈥
The pain is why Detective Cookie chose this area 13-years-ago for her Chess Club. She鈥檚 taught the game鈥檚 life lessons to thousands of kids, including Zekeriyia Kedir.
鈥淐hess teaches you thinking before you do something,鈥 said Kedir. 鈥淚f you are violent, you could get in trouble or get arrested or go to jail.鈥
Kadir鈥檚 classmate, Anaya Austin, sees chess another way.
鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of like a career,鈥 said Austin. 鈥淟ike my next move is to go to middle school. It鈥檚 kind of like another move, but just slower. Very slow.鈥
Detective Cookie鈥檚 chess club has scientific merit. Some therapists and doctors use chess therapy to get positive results for people who have neurological disorders or learning disabilities. Van Asselt鈥檚 Principal Huyen Lam sees it first-hand.
King County, Seattle responds to rise in gang violence, shootings
鈥淜ids who often struggle with explosive emotion a lot — I can see some right there — this has helped them to stay really calm in certain situations and seeing themselves in a positive light,鈥 said Lam.
Even the school鈥檚 success coach, Andre Mckinney-Asim, uses the game to resolve playground-politics.
鈥淲hen there鈥檚 a conflict, students can sit across from each other and hash it out over a game of chess,鈥 said Mckinney-Asim. 鈥淏y the end of the game, they鈥檙e shaking hands and it definitely distracts them from what the conflict initially was.鈥
That was the goal Tuesday morning, after gun-violence hit so close to home; let these ten and eleven-year-olds just be kids for a couple hours and play a game in peace.