Buffalo's Black community stunned after being visited by 'evil'
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[May 16, 2022] By
Jenna Zucker
BUFFALO, N.Y. (Reuters) - The Tops Friendly
Market chosen by the white gunman to launch his deadly racist attack on
Saturday served as an anchor of sorts for the Black community along
Buffalo's Jefferson Avenue, one of the few places where residents could
buy groceries.
Now even that modest sanctuary no longer feels safe to many Black people
in Buffalo, which takes pride in its nickname "the City of Good
Neighbors."
Not after 18-year-old Payton Gendron, dressed in camouflage and body
armor and wielding a rifle with a high-capacity magazine, drove into the
supermarket parking lot in broad daylight and opened fire, killing 10
and wounding three others. Eleven of the 13 victims were Black.
"Somebody knew enough to know the one store our community has," said
Denise Glenn, an activist from VOICE Buffalo, speaking to the clutch of
about 100 people who gathered on Sunday morning outside Tops, which had
been cordoned off by police tape and adorned with flowers and makeshift
memorials.
Glenn was alluding to the chilling news that the gunman had driven for
hours from his home to target the store, having selected it because of
the neighborhood's high concentration of Black residents, according to
authorities.
"That was an evil, racist, white supremacist," Reverend Darius Pridgen
said from the pulpit at True Bethel Baptist Church on Sunday. "He
literally looked for a zip code that had the highest concentration of
African Americans."
The worshipers at the predominantly Black church, about a five-minute
drive from Tops, included family of the victims and some of those who
were at the store when the rampage unfolded.
Rev. Pridgen invited members of the congregation who were touched by the
shooting to come to the front of the church and share their experiences.
One by one, they came forward.
Charles Everhart Sr., 65, told his fellow worshipers that his grandson
Zaire Goodman, a 20-year-old Tops employee, was shot in the neck but
somehow survived. "He was pushing the carts back to the store and he was
one of the first to get hit," Everhart said.
At the vigil outside the supermarket, anger and stunned disbelief mixed
with feelings of helplessness and grief. The crowd sang "Amazing Grace."
Many broke down into tears.
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A mourner crouches by flowers and candles, during a vigil for
victims of the shooting at a TOPS supermarket in Buffalo, New York,
U.S. May 15, 2022. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
'SO MUCH TRAUMA'
Employees of the store huddled together, trying to comfort one
another. Volunteers grilled food and handed out water. Dozens of
police officers milled around, and the surrounding blocks remained
sealed off, reinforcing a sense of dread and disruption.
Tyrell Ford, 36, lead community organizer of Voices Buffalo, a
non-profit group that organized the vigil, said he was still trying
to work through what had happened.
"There's so much trauma in the Black community and this is the time
to start the process of grieving," he said. "This causes mental
health problems and trust issues in our community. You can see how
vibrant our community is."
The calculated nature of the attack, as described by law
enforcement, may well have amplified the siege mentality being felt
by some local residents.
A document circulating online that appeared to have been written by
the killer sketched out a to-do list for the attack, including
purchasing tactical equipment and testing his upload speeds for the
livestream.
In addition, a 180-page manifesto outlining 'The Great Replacement
Theory' - the racist conspiracy theory that white people are being
replaced by minorities in the United States and other countries -
also circulated online, reportedly authored by Gendron.
Julie Harwell, 33, was one of those who found themselves in the
wrong place at the wrong time on Saturday afternoon: shopping for
birthday party supplies at Tops with her daughter and the girl's
father. Then the gunshots started.
"I thought it was just a normal, neighborhood shooting, so we
ducked," Harwell said. "Once it didn't stop, something told me to
get up and start running because I heard footsteps. He was shooting
people twice to make sure they were dead."
"I saw a lot of stuff I’d never seen," she said, "and that I thought
my daughter would never see."
(Reporting by Jenna Zucker in Buffalo; Additional reporting by Steve
Gorman; Writing by Frank McGurty; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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