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Vigil unites Emory in mourning for Charleston shooting

Members of the Emory community gathered Friday at Candler School of Theology for a prayer vigil in response to the attack on a historic African American church in Charleston, South Carolina.

Attendees filled the Wesley Teaching Chapel to capacity, even standing along the sides and in the back to show support and unity in the wake of the shooting at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church. Law enforcement officials are investigating the case as a racially motivated hate crime.

Ellen Echols Purdum, Candler’s assistant dean of student life and spiritual formation, spoke the names of each of the shooting victims as nine candles were lit on the altar in their memory.

“We pray especially this day for the souls of our brothers and sisters who have died through violence: Cynthia, Susie, Ethel, DePayne, Clementa, Tywanza, Daniel, Sharonda and Myra, and for their families, friends, colleagues and church communities,” Purdum said.

“Take away the arrogance and hatred which infects our hearts; break down the walls that separate us; unite us in bonds of love; and work through our struggle and confusion to accomplish your purposes on earth.”

Other prayers and readings were offered by Barbara Day Miller, associate dean of worship and music, and Angela Johnson and Karen Sawyer, both rising second-year master of divinity students who serve as spiritual life coordinators in Candler’s Office of Student Programming.

The readings were interspersed with periods of quiet prayer and reflection, the silence broken only by the soft sounds of some attendees wiping away tears.

Many attendees remained after the vigil program ended, continuing to pray at their seats or coming forward to kneel at the altar. Those present also wrote prayers and condolences in a journal that will be sent to Emanuel AME Church.


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