Former P.S. 150 student in spotlight

Daniel L. Squadron

Downtown Express

Article BY John Bayles

May 11, 2011

Downtown Express photo by John Bayles

Brook Peters insists he has not become an overnight celebrity and the most popular eighth grader at his school. That, however, is hard to believe.

In the past month the 14-year-old has been featured on nearly every cable news network, including NY1, PIX11, FOX, NBC, CBS and CNN. He has a full page spread in the current edition of New York Magazine and last Friday he was “Person of the Week” on ABC’s World News.

Meanwhile, in the middle of the media blitz, Peters has somehow managed to increase his math grade from a B average to an A, and study for his Regents Exams.

Peters premiered his fourth film, a documentary entitled “The Second Day,” at this year’s Tribeca Film Festival. The film opens with a voiceover from Peters and an image of his first day at kindergarten at P.S. 150.

“This was my first day of Kindergarten,” Peters says.

Then an image appears of the Twin Towers in flames on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001.

“This was my second day,” Peters says.

Peters has managed to use 38 minutes to tell a story that spans nearly ten years and countless nights of sleep interrupted by nightmares. The documentary explores how Lower Manhattan children have processed the trauma of the attacks and includes interviews of roughly 20 kids, teachers, principals and school counselors.

Over the last year Peters has been working frantically to edit the nearly 18 hours of footage and trim it down to 38 minutes. The pace increased significantly when he decided he wanted to submit it to the Tribeca Film Festival.

When word of the documentary’s premier spread, Peters began getting a lot of attention. But following Osama bin Laden’s death, the interest from media outlets, not just here in the States, but also from countries such as Finland, Germany, India and China, has increased dramatically.

Sen. Squadron honors Peters
Last Wednesday State Senator Daniel Squadron introduced a resolution on the Senate floor in Albany honoring Peters and his film. The resolution passed unanimously.

“This week, in which the whole world has turned its attention again to the attacks of September 11th, 2001… it’s appropriate to highlight what’s happening locally and what’s happening on the personal level,” Senator Squadron said on the Senate floor.

Squadron said the “success and sensitivity” evident in Peters’ film should be “commended and highlighted.”

“I want to take a moment on the floor of the State Senate to commend and thank Brook for reminding us all of the many different ways September 11th still affects us and the many different ways that we are all, as a community, continuing to rise above it,” stated Squadron.

On Friday Squadron met Peters and his mother at Zuccotti Park to deliver the proclamation in person. They were joined by firefighters from FDNY Engine Company 10 and FDNY Ladder Company 10. Peters’ mother Michelle has always been a FDNY volunteer since Brook was a little kid.

FDNY connection
Peters’ film has an added element because it highlights the bond he has with the FDNY. Peters grew up in firehouses all over Lower Manhattan because his mother Michelle was an avid volunteer and a single mother. Hence, many of the firefighters served as father figures to Peters. On Sept. 11, Michelle was actually at FDNY Ladder Company 10. After the second tower was hit, she immediately ran to P.S. 150, picked up Brook and put him in a rig.

The film tells of the following moments when Michelle decided she had to get Brook to safety, out of Lower Manhattan and how she crossed Canal Street carrying Brook, providing the kindergartener with a viewpoint he would never forget.

“Since I was on her shoulder, the entire time we were walking I was looking directly at the towers,” said Peters.

Michelle put Brook down once they crossed Canal Street and broke into tears. In film Michelle recounts something Brook said to her at that moment.

“You just have to remember the good times you had with them,” Brook told his mom.

Funerals and memorials that Brook and his mother attended consumed the following months. All of them were for FDNY members.

Click here to continue reading this story