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		A shocked Texas town struggles to make sense of school massacre
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		 [May 26, 2022] By 
		Brad Brooks 
 UVALDE, Texas (Reuters) -Frank Salazar 
		pointed down the road at the low-slung buildings of Robb Elementary 
		School, just two blocks from his home, struggling to make sense of the 
		massacre that unfolded there less than 24 hours earlier, stunning his 
		little Texas town.
 
 Salazar, 18, a senior at Uvalde High School, went to Robb Elementary as 
		a child, walking to school with his cousins. Like almost everyone else 
		in the town of about 16,000, he knows somebody directly affected by the 
		killing.
 
 "This community is extremely tight, but there are many people who choose 
		to mourn quietly, alone, and in a small town like this we're going to 
		respect that," Salazar said.
 
 Two friends had younger siblings who died, he said, speaking in a 
		matter-of-fact tone, his eyes bloodshot and wide open.
 
 Like many others in Uvalde, Salazar appeared dazed by what had just 
		unfolded in his community - the murder of 19 children and two adults by 
		an 18-year-old gunman armed with an AR-15 style rifle.
 
 During the afternoon, a makeshift memorial of toys and flowers slowly 
		grew outside Robb Elementary, now encircled with yellow crime-scene 
		tape. Two women, barred from entering the grounds, handed a 
		somber-looking officer a pair of giant teddy bears to place with the 
		other offerings at the front of the school. One of the women was 
		weeping.
 
		
		 
		A Wednesday morning mass at the Sacred Heart Catholic Church was 
		attended by about 50 people, who listened as a priest struggled to tell 
		them why so many of their town's children had died. He said he was 
		praying to the Lord to guide everyone in Uvalde to some understanding of 
		why such killings took place.
 SUBDUED
 
 The atmosphere in Uvalde, where large oaks throw shade over sometimes 
		barely paved streets, was eerily subdued. At the grocery store, patrons 
		quietly checked shopping lists and spoke to each other in hushed tones.
 
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			Law enforcement personnel investigate the scene at Robb Elementary 
			School, the site of a mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas, U.S. May 25, 
			2022. REUTERS/Nuri Vallbona 
            
			
			
			 
            Large placards bearing photos of the high school's 
			valedictorian and other scholars line the lawn in front of city 
			hall. Family names carved out of wood adorn many homes, and crosses 
			are planted in yards, highlighting a strong Christian faith that 
			runs deep in Uvalde.
 At the local recreation center, four young women - recent Uvalde 
			high school graduates - stood together talking. Three were waiting 
			to give blood, and the other was working the drive and handing out 
			pizza.
 
 Reminiscing about growing up in Uvalde, they spoke with fondness 
			about their old schools. At Robb Elementary, they said, students 
			with birthdays would hear their names over the loudspeakers every 
			day. They laughed but grew emotional as the happy memories mixed 
			with the deep sense of loss that now seems to weigh on the town.
 
 Residents were not the only ones seeking answers to explain the 
			carnage. Scores of law enforcement officers from federal, state and 
			local levels combed the working class neighborhood around the 
			school, knocking on the doors of humble little ranch-style houses, 
			many with chickens pecking freely in the yards.
 
 Men wearing FBI jackets were seen huddling with residents, stepping 
			into the shade of porches to ask questions.
 
 Jorge Roque, who lives close to Robb Elementary, grimaced and choked 
			back tears as he pushed his straw cowboy hat back on his head, 
			trying to make sense of it all.
 
 He said his two granddaughters survived the shooting at the school 
			of second, third and fourth graders who typically range in age from 
			7 to 10. One of them is in 4th grade, the same year as the children 
			who were killed, he said.
 
 "Half of her class - it's the one that got shot," Roque said.
 
 (Reporting by Brad Brooks; additional reporting by Gabriella Borter; 
			Editing by Ross Colvin, Grant McCool and Richard Pullin)
 
            
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