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Charleston massacre church reopens in triumph over 'the Devil'

Published: 22 Jun 2015 - 10:02 am | Last Updated: 12 Jan 2022 - 04:04 pm

 



Charleston, United States---The historic black church in South Carolina where a white gunman murdered nine African Americans, held its first service since the massacre on Sunday, an emotional gathering celebrating the lives of those slain.
Hundreds of congregants, some tearful, packed the Emanuel African American Episcopal Church for a service led by visiting clergy because the congregation's pastor was among those killed by a white supremacist said to have been trying to ignite a race war.
The service offered the still-grieving community of Charleston the opportunity to mark what many argued was its triumph in thwarting the shooter's aim to foment hatred.
- Victory over 'the Devil'-
Celebrants at Emanuel AME church, meanwhile, said the accused gunman -- 21-year-old Dylann Roof -- had also failed miserably in his quest to break their spirit of love and faith.
"There they were in the house of the Lord, studying your word, praying with one another," said visiting minister Reverend John Gillison from the pulpit of the Emanuel AME church, four days after the massacre.
"But the Devil also entered. And the Devil was trying to take charge," he said.
"Thanks be to God, hallelujah, that the Devil cannot take control of your people. And the Devil cannot take control of your church."
A website allegedly created by Roof has been found, in which he wrote a 2,500 word racist screed against African Americans and appears in photos with guns and burning the US flag.
Roof went on the run after the shooting and was caught a day later in neighboring North Carolina. He is in solitary confinement in jail charged with nine counts of murder.
Authorities are treating the shooting as a hate crime and also investigating it as possible act of domestic terrorism.
The attack on Emanuel -- one of the most renowned African American houses of worship in the United States -- was the bloodiest on a black church since the civil rights era.
The picturesque white brick Gothic church with its weather vane-topped steeple -- one of the most recognizable buildings in Charleston -- is known lovingly by many here as "Mother Emanuel" because of its prominence in the community and a fabled history dating back to the slavery era.
Sunday's service was at times somber, at times jubilant, as the mostly black church members -- flanked by scores of white visitors who attended to show their solidarity -- raised their voices to sing familiar hymns, at times clapping and swaying in rhythm.
 

AFP