Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Charleston slow to recover from slayings

Holes left in fabric of city by church attack, police killing of unarmed man

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CHARLESTON, S.C. — The bullet holes in the fellowship hall at Emanuel AME church have been patched, but the holes in the fabric of life in Charleston remain.

Sharonda Coleman-Singleton is absent from Goose Creek High School, her exhortatio­ns still ringing in the ears of girls who ran track for her. The strong voice of Emanuel’s pastor-legislator, Clementa Pinckney, does not resound, here or at the capitol in Columbia.

Dylann Roof, killer of these worshipper­s and six others at one of the South’s first African-American churches, is headed to death row after an agonizing and therapeuti­c trial. But if justice has been served, the community has not moved on; the shots that rang out on June 17, 2015, still resonate.

They are amplified by the unfinished case of a white North Charleston police officer charged with murder in the death of a black driver. Efforts go on to build a museum to tell the stories of more than three centuries of African-American struggles, and to place this community’s recent suffering in context.

And at Emanuel, churchgoer­s still assemble for Bible study on most Wednesdays, vowing that love and faith will prevail.

THEY CALLED HER ‘MOM’

The girls who ran track for Singleton called her Mom.

“She would take you in like you were her daughter, then she would teach you how to be a lady,” said senior Alexis Simmons.

Singleton’s death stung the closeknit team. They had their best season ever just before Singleton was killed. Even more athletes made the state meet the year after her death. And Goose Creek High has managed to make one of Singleton’s dreams come true — the school will host a track tournament next month in Singleton’s honor.

“She loved on them, and it is good to see it pour back out,” said Doris Simmons, who was hired as an assistant coach after Singleton’s death (she is not related to Alexis Simmons). “We all know this could have went the opposite way. You would have a couple of girls rebelling because of the pain, and you just see these girls just wrap their arms around them.”

“Think about Dylann Roof,” said Michael Moore. “I don’t believe he could have done what he did if he knew about the humanity of the people in that room.”

Moore — the great-great grandson of Robert Smalls, a man who freed himself, a ship’s crew and their families from slavery by commandeer­ing a ship from Confederat­es in 1862, and later served in Congress — believes that education can help fill the emptiness in the souls of people like Roof. He is president of the $75 million African-American history museum proposed for the site of the old wharf where nearly half of the slaves that entered the U.S. first stepped on American soil.

Former Mayor Joe Riley needs to raise $19 million quickly to reach his goal of starting two years of constructi­on by the end of this year.

“This is one of the most sacred sites of African-American history in the western hemisphere,” Riley said of the wharf, just a short walk from the old slave market where artists sell the sweetgrass baskets native to the area. “There are stories of courage and determinat­ion and suffering. These are American stories that Americans do not know.”

Moore said he wants the door to the museum to be very wide — big enough to acknowledg­e that African-American history is really just American history. Dylann Roof walked through Emanuel’s open door intent on murdering black people; someday, Moore hopes, his museum’s door will help open hearts.

‘UNFINISHED BUSINESS’ It’s been hard enough for the black community to come to terms with the murders at Emanuel. The unresolved case of a white police officer charged in the shooting death of an unarmed black man during a traffic stop makes it even harder.

The killing of Walter Scott happened in North Charleston — an 8-mile drive from Emanuel AME. And former officer Michael Slager’s trial happened a month before Roof’s trial started, with a jury unable to reach a verdict in the murder trial of the officer.

Walter Scott’s death was videotaped by a bystander and played over and over — the 50-year-old man in the green shirt running slowly away from an officer firing eight times at his back.

“There’s great unease. It’s unfinished business. Communitie­s, black and otherwise, are still walking on eggshells, talking about these things,” said Mount Zion AME pastor Kylon Middleton.

WITNESSING PROGRESS And yet, there has been progress. The most obvious legacy of the Emanuel AME shootings came in South Carolina’s capital, where after 50 years the Confederat­e flag was removed from Statehouse grounds.

Roof, a self-taught white supremacis­t, took pictures with the familiar flag. And after years of ignoring calls to bring it down — including from Pinckney himself — the killings shook many Republican­s enough to remove the rebel banner less than a month after the massacre.

But was it enough?

 ?? JEFFREY COLLINS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former Charleston Mayor Joe Riley, left, and Internatio­nal African-American Museum President Michael Moore, right, stand Jan. 30 at the site of a new museum about African-American history being built over the next three years in Charleston, S.C.
JEFFREY COLLINS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Former Charleston Mayor Joe Riley, left, and Internatio­nal African-American Museum President Michael Moore, right, stand Jan. 30 at the site of a new museum about African-American history being built over the next three years in Charleston, S.C.

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