Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Vice president tells Buffalo mourners: ‘We will come together’

Grandmothe­r, 86, laid to rest amid emotional pleas

- By Susan Haigh and Patrick Semansky

Mourners laid to rest the last of 10 Black victims killed in a racist attack at a Buffalo supermarke­t with a service on Saturday that became a call to action and an emotional plea to end the hate and violence that has wracked the nation.

The funeral for 86-yearold Ruth Whitfield — the oldest of the 10 people killed in the attack two weeks ago — included an impromptu speech by Vice President Kamala Harris. She attended the service at Mount Olive Baptist Church in Buffalo with second gentleman Doug Emhoff.

Harris told the mourners this is a moment in time for “all good people” to stand up to the injustice that occurred May 14 at the Tops Friendly Market, as well as the Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, and other mass shootings.

“This is a moment that requires all good people, all God-loving people to stand up and say we will not stand for this. Enough is enough,” said Harris, who wasn’t scheduled to speak and came to the microphone at the urging of the Rev. Al Sharpton. “We will come together based on what we all know we have in common, and we will not let those people who are motivated by hate separate us or make us feel fear.”

Following the funeral, Harris and Emhoff visited a memorial outside the supermarke­t. The vice president left a large bouquet of white flowers at the site, and the pair paused to pray for several minutes. President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden had placed flowers at the same memorial May 17 and visited with the victims’ families. Biden is expected to head to Texas for a visit this weekend with the families of the victim’s of Tuesday’s school shooting.

Harris later told reporters the administra­tion is not “sitting around waiting to figure out what the solution looks like” to the nation’s gun violence problem.

“We know what works on that,” she said, reiteratin­g support for background checks and a ban on assault weapons. Harris said the nation has to come together, as well.

“We have to agree that if we are to be strong as a nation, we must stand strong, identifyin­g our diversity as our unity,” she said.

It’s been a sad week of goodbyes for family and friends of the Buffalo shooting victims, a group that includes a restaurant worker who went to the market to buy his 3-yearold’s birthday cake; a father and die-hard Buffalo Bills fan who worked as a school bus aide; and a 32-year-old sister who moved to the city to help a brother battling leukemia.

Whitfield, a grandmothe­r and mother of four, had been inside the supermarke­t after visiting her husband of 68 years in a nursing home when a gunman identified by police as 18-year-old Payton Gendron began the deadly onslaught.

Authoritie­s said Gendron, who is white, targeted the store three hours from his home in Conklin because it is in a predominan­tly Black neighborho­od.

Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who delivered a fiery tribute to Whitfield at the beginning of the funeral service, called for all accomplice­s who aided and abetted “this monster” who opened fire in the supermarke­t to be held accountabl­e, from the gun manufactur­ers and distributo­rs to the parents of the suspect.

Crump said those those who “instructed and radicalize­d this young, insecure individual” should also be held to account for taking Whitfield from her family, the Buffalo community and the planet. He called her “one of the most angelic figures that we have ever known.”

“It is a sin that this young depraved man, not a boy, went and killed Ruth Whitfield and the ‘Buffalo 10,’” Crump said, referring to the victims.

Sharpton, during his eulogy, said all communitie­s need to come together and “disarm the haters.”

“There is an epidemic of racial violence that is accommodat­ed by gun laws that allow people to kill us. You ain’t got to love us, but you shouldn’t have easy access to military weapons to kill us.”

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