“We were just fed up, done with waiting,” he said of the teen-led march. “I mean it shouldn’t be up to us; it stinks that we have to lead the charge.
“But I guess we’re the ones who have to fix things for the future.”
A brighter future is what landed Jalen in O’Fallon in the first place. He and his family came from the Chicago area when he was 3.
“We moved here because (his parents) thought there’d be more opportunities for us here.”
His father, Jamal Thompson, works with special needs students in the Fort Zumwalt school district and coaches girls basketball at Riverview Gardens. His mother, Heather Thompson, is a middle-school nurse in the district. His younger brother, Jordan, will start as a freshman at Fort Zumwalt West in the fall.
From the sound of it, high school Principal Neil Berry will look forward to having another Thompson walking the halls.
After quickly describing Jalen as “awesome” and “a great kid,” he talked about how Jalen visited district grade schools to talk with young students about making the most of their education.
“He is wise beyond his years, to say the least,” Berry said. “Whether he’s 17 or 35, there is a maturity about him.”
Talk to a police officer who met with Jalen and his colleagues before the march and that word pops up again.