Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pastor: ‘There is always hope’

9/11 Memorial designer selected to help Charleston, with church input

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ACHARLESTO­N, S.C. buzzing sound comes from one of the church’s back doors. “Is that John?” the Rev. Eric Manning asks, stopping conversati­on.

The pastor pops his head into a nearby office and checks a TV screen, which displays feeds from the many security cameras now installed at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, though most here simply call it Mother Emanuel. A tall man stands at the door, patiently waiting.

“It’s John!” Manning says joyously, letting the man in.

John’s last name is Darby. He is the local businessma­n who, shortly after the shooting that claimed the “Emanuel 9,” stepped up to offer his help, if needed, in planning and creating a proper memorial. And now, many months later, he has become a trusted friend of the pastor.

“We don’t want the memorial to be a burden to the church,” Darby told the Las Vegas Review-journal. “So it’ll be separately funded, upkept and so forth.”

But the church — in the form of its pastor, its members, the survivors and victims’ families — has been involved every step of the way.

Michael Arad, the man who designed the 9/11 Memorial in New York City, was selected to design it. It will stand on the church grounds — most likely in a spot just west of the building, which, for now, is a parking lot.

A concept will hopefully be ready come July 15, the church’s 200th anniversar­y. But if it’s not ready by then, it’s OK, Manning said.

“I would say getting from point

A to point B seemed like a lifetime, but it was (a process) that we weren’t going to push or rush,” the pastor said.

Since the shooting, several members have left the church. It was too painful. But others stayed. And the community of Charleston came

 ??  ?? Flowers in the front gate memorializ­e the nine church members killed.
Flowers in the front gate memorializ­e the nine church members killed.

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