The News-Times

Rememberin­g Sandy Hook

Monday Mass celebrates victims of shooting eight years later

- By Rob Ryser

NEWTOWN — Newtowners separated by coronaviru­s restrictio­ns relied on their faith to make connection­s with each other during a virtual prayer service on Monday to mark the tragic Sandy Hook shooting eight years ago.

“In this season when the nights are getting longer and longer and when we must deal with darkness seeming to overwhelm us, our faith traditions remind us that light shines even in the midst of the darkest times,” said the Rev. Matt Crebbin, pastor of Newtown Congregati­onal Church. “Our light can come forth and transform the world.”

The virtual prayer service, sponsored by the Newtown Interfaith Council, was among a handful of annual events here and elsewhere in Connecticu­t that marked the December morning in 2012 when 20 first-graders and six educators were slain at Sandy Hook Elementary School.

But unlike other years, when services have drawn the media and VIPs, observance­s were private or conducted online to comply with pandemic guidelines.

At St. Rose of Lima Church, for example, the annual Sandy Hook anniversar­y Mass was conducted in private, to keep the crowd under the 100-person COVID-19 cap, with two smaller morning Masses offered for the public.

Similarly, a morning vigil

“May their souls and their lives and memories inspire us to create a better world.” —Rabbi Barukh Schectman of Congregati­on Adath Israel

to honor Connecticu­t gun violence victims was conducted virtually.

But like Sandy Hook anniversar­ies in previous years, there was no shortage of VIPs offering condolence­s.

“I think about how that day eight years ago was the saddest day we had in the White House,” tweeted President-elect Joe Biden, who in 2012 was vice president. “I know the pain never goes away.”

And from the Senate floor, Sens. Richard Blumenthal and Chris Murphy each paid tribute to the beauty of the lives that were lost, and the strength of the families who lost them.

“That day changed us forever,” Blumenthal said. “That day still haunts me.”

The virtual interfaith service on Monday featured prayers from various faith traditions, readings from sacred texts and quiet time for people to reflect in their own way.

There was also a reading of the names of the victims.

“May their souls and their lives and memories inspire us to create a better world,” said Rabbi Barukh Schectman of Congregati­on Adath Israel.

The Rev. Lori Miller, of Newtown Unit

ed Methodist Church, offered a prayer for those grieving.

“We join our hearts in prayer, looking for that solidarity with the holy — looking for that strength and peace that only God can give,” Miller said.

The Rev. Andrea Castner Wyatt of Trinity Episcopal Church agreed.

“We remember love which cannot be destroyed by violence,” Castner said. “Love that surely lives on somehow in the tender mercy and mystery that is God.”

The virtual prayer service capped a solemn day in Newtown that saw flags lowered to half staff in front of school buildings closed by COVID-19.

Some faculty and staff started their day with a virtual prayer service while students in the higher grades received ageappropr­iate messages of comfort and remembranc­e in their study spaces at home.

Before the school day began, Newtown’s congressio­nal delegation released statements of solidarity with Newtown.

“[W]here there’s grief, there’s hope,” Sen. Murphy said. “I continue to be inspired by the advocates in Newtown and across this country who won’t stop fighting to make this world a gentler, safer place for our children and our communitie­s.”

 ?? H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Paatricia Font, of Brookfield, lights a candle after Mass on Monday morning at St. Rose of Lima Church, the eighth anniversar­y of the Sandy Hook shooting.
H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Paatricia Font, of Brookfield, lights a candle after Mass on Monday morning at St. Rose of Lima Church, the eighth anniversar­y of the Sandy Hook shooting.
 ??  ??
 ?? H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Father Tomasz Przybyl celebrated the first Mass of the day at St. Rose of Lima Church on Monday morning, the eighth anniversar­y of the Sandy Hook shooting in Newtown. Below, attendees read, reflect and pray in silence before the first Mass.
H John Voorhees III / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Father Tomasz Przybyl celebrated the first Mass of the day at St. Rose of Lima Church on Monday morning, the eighth anniversar­y of the Sandy Hook shooting in Newtown. Below, attendees read, reflect and pray in silence before the first Mass.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States