08:18 20/06/2015
Charleston - Relatives of the nine black community leaders shot
down during a Bible study session confronted the shooting suspect on
Friday during his initial court hearing, and spoke of love.
"I
forgive you, my family forgives you," said Anthony Thompson. "We would
like you to take this opportunity to repent. ... Do that and you'll be
better off than you are right now."
Dylan Storm Roof, who faces
nine counts of murder, appeared by video from the county jail, looking
sombre in a striped jumpsuit and speaking only briefly in response to
the judge's questions.
Roof was ordered held on $1m bond on the weapons charge pending another hearing by another judge on the murder charges.
Felecia
Sanders survived the Wednesday night attack by pretending to be dead,
but lost her son Tywanza. She also spoke from the judge's courtroom,
where Roof's image appeared on a television screen.
"We welcomed
you on Wednesday night in our Bible study with open arms. You have
killed some of the most beautifulest (sic) people that I know. Every
fiber in my body hurts ... and I'll never be the same," Sanders told
Roof.
"Tywanza was my hero," Sanders said, but even she showed
some kindness as she confronted the man accused of killing her son. "As
we said in Bible study, we enjoyed you, but may God have mercy on you."
Roof looked sad and bowed his head slightly, but showed no other emotion as the relatives spoke.
Their
remarkable comments seemed in keeping with a spirit evident on the
streets of Charleston on Friday, where people built a memorial and
planned a vigil to repudiate whatever a gunman would hope to accomplish
by attacking the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, one of the
nation's most important African-American sanctuaries.
Unite
"A
hateful person came to this community with some crazy idea he'd be able
to divide, but all he did was unite us and make us love each other even
more," Mayor Joseph P Riley jnr said as he described plans for the
evening vigil at a sports arena.
South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley said the state will "absolutely" want the death penalty.
A
steady stream of people brought flowers and notes and shared sombre
thoughts at a growing memorial in front of the church, which President
Barack Obama called "a sacred place in the history of Charleston and in
the history of America".
"This was an act of racial terrorism and
must be treated as such," the Reverend Cornell William Brooks, president
of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, said
on Friday in Charleston.
Roof, 21, had complained while getting
drunk on vodka recently that "blacks were taking over the world" and
that "someone needed to do something about it for the white race",
according to Joey Meek, who tipped the FBI when he saw his friend on
surveillance images.
Roof was arrested in North Carolina after an
alert motorist recognised him, and returned in shackles to a county jail
where he was being held next to the cell of Michael Slager, the white
former police officer charged with fatally shooting black motorist
Walter Scott.
The victims included Clementa Pinckney, a state
senator who doubled as the church's lead pastor, and eight others who
each played multiple roles in their communities and families: ministers
and coaches, teachers and a librarian, counselors and choir singers and
the church sexton who kept the historic building clean.
"The
suspect entered the group and was accepted by them, as they believed
that he wanted to join them in this Bible study," Charleston County
Coroner Rae Wilson said. Then, "he became very aggressive and violent."
The
Justice Department is investigating whether to file federal hate crime
charges, although Attorney General Loretta Lynch said state prosecutions
are sometimes more appropriate. Obama pointed to lax gun controls as a
factor, and complained that Washington politics have shut down efforts
to require universal background checks for gun purchases.
Most of the presidential candidates avoided mentioning guns at all.
On
his Facebook page, Roof displayed the flags of defeated white-ruled
regimes, posing with a Confederate flags plate on his car and wearing a
jacket with stitched-on flag patches from apartheid-era South Africa and
Rhodesia, which is now black-led Zimbabwe.
Roof was arrested in
February after workers said he appeared dressed entirely in black and
asking strange questions at the Columbiana shopping mall. He was charged
with possessing suboxone, a drug typically used to treat heroin
addiction. A trespassing charge was added after he showed up again in
April, prompting a three-year ban from the mall.
Spilling blood
inside the "Mother Emanuel" church, founded in 1816, evoked painful
memories nationwide that black churches have so often suffered from
racist violence.
White landowners burned the church in 1822 after
one of its founders, Denmark Vesey, tried to organise a slave revolt.
Parishioners worshipped underground until after the Civil War, then
rebuilt and grew stronger, eventually winning campaigns for voting
rights and political representation.
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