Charleston church grieves synagogue
massacre, angry at Trump rhetoric
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[October 29, 2018]
By Harriet McLeod
CHARLESTON, S.C. (Reuters) - Parishoners at
the historic black Emanuel church in Charleston, South Carolina, on
Sunday grieved this weekend's Pittsburgh synagogue massacre and recalled
a 2015 mass shooting at their church, while chiding President Donald
Trump's "rhetoric of hate".
"Words do matter," Reverend Eric Manning told more than 100 parishioners
attending the Sunday service. The church planned a prayer vigil for the
Pittsburgh victims later at a Holocaust memorial a block away.
While Trump immediately condemned the synagogue shooting, Manning said
things the president has said "for the last few weeks or years, it makes
you want to holler, throw up your hands and wonder what's going on."
In 2015, shooter Dylann Roof, a white man, walked into the Emanuel
African Methodist Episcopal Church and opened fire at a bible study
group, killing nine people. On Saturday, a gunman stormed into the Tree
of Life Synagogue in Pittsburgh during a service, killing 11 worshippers
and wounding six other people.
The Pittsburgh suspect, Robert Bowers, 46, was not a Trump fan and had
accused the president online of doing nothing to stop an "infestation"
of the United States by Jews. Trump condemned the shooting and said
there was no tolerance for anti-Semitism.
Still, Trump's critics have blasted the Republican president for his
frequent anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim comments, and for blaming "both
sides" when a counter-protester was killed at a white supremacist rally
in Virginia in 2017.
In January African and Haitian politicians, the United Nations human
rights office, and U.S. lawmakers from both parties criticized as racist
some of Trump's comments about African countries. He tweeted in
response, denying that he used racist words.
There was no immediate comment from the White House on the criticism
from the Charleston church.
Standing in the Emanuel sanctuary after the two-hour service, many
parishioners, including some survivors of the 2015 tragedy, said Trump's
words incited division and inflamed tensions.
"I blame the Trump administration for the rhetoric and the hate. They
call everything fake news," said Liz Alston, 70, a retired school
principal who lost friends in the 2015 shooting.
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Liz Alston, church historian of Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal
Church, where Dylann Roof killed nine members of a Bible study in a
2015 hate crime, sits in the front row of the sanctuary after the
Sunday morning service in Charleston, South Carolina October 28,
2018. REUTERS/Harriet McLeod
BEMOANING 'THE HATRED'
After the shooting at Emanuel, members, survivors and their families
have participated in conferences in Washington, D.C. and in
Charleston on gun violence and racial hatred. Some tearfully forgave
Roof at his arraignment in 2015 but others did not, and one screamed
at him during his trial.
Sharon Coakley, 66, whose sister Myra Thompson was murdered by Roof,
said news of the latest shooting revived the devastation she felt in
2015 and her struggle to someday be able to forgive.
"That killing of those Jewish people stems from our leaders," said
Coakley, a manufacturing technician. "We've talked about gun
control. We've talked about the hatred that comes from the president
of the United States."
The church has improved security since the attack, installing
surveillance cameras and adding uniformed, armed guards at its
services, a constant reminder of the threat of violence.
"The church will never be the same," said Wayne Singleton, 50, music
director at Emanuel. He played the piano during the funeral of Rev.
Clementa Pinckney, where then President Barack Obama gave the eulogy
and sang "Amazing Grace."
On the night of the massacre at Emanuel, Roof was invited to join
the bible study group. He sat down, took out his gun and began
shooting members who had their heads bowed and eyes closed in
prayer. Lisa Wade, 53, a social worker, described the lingering
fear.
"We've lost a lot of members," Wade said. "People are still afraid
to come into the sanctuary. I still cannot close my eyes and pray."
When she heard about the Pittsburgh shootings, she said: "It brought
it all back. I just think it is unbelievable that this is still
going on."
(Reporting by Harriet McLeod; Writing by Dina Kyriakidou; Editing by
David Gregorio)
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