The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Survivors of S.C. church fire teach the power of forgivenes­s

- By Clare Dignan

HAMDEN — University members and the public came together Friday to hear from three people whose capacity for healing has been through the ultimate test.

The survivors and family members of those who died in the mass shooting at a South Carolina church three years ago spoke at Quinnipiac University’s Center for Religion about finding forgivenes­s for the man who killed their friends and family members.

In 2015, white supremacis­t Dylann Roof, then 21, killed nine African Americans when he open fired on a Bible study in the historic Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C. He was convicted last year of 33 federal crimes, including hate crimes and obstructio­n of religion, for which he was given the death penalty.

“Forgivenes­s means pretty much getting myself off the hook and it has nothing to do with the person that you’re forgiving, because your forgiving that person really helps you find peace with yourself and find peace with God,” said the Rev. Anthony Thompson, whose newly-ordained wife, Myra Thompson, was leading a Bible study at the church when she was killed. “It frees you from any kind of anger or hatred or anything you’ve been harboring, especially against the person who may have done the wrong, in this case Dylann Roof.”

Thompson spoke about how he came to forgive Roof in the moment he confronted his wife’s killer at Roof ’s bond hearing. That’s where he told Roof he and his family forgave him and that Roof needed to repent and confess to God.

“I have no ill feelings about him, no anger or hatred,” Thompson said. “Forgiving him was about so he would have no control in my life or my children’s lives, or have any hold on us whatsoever. Forgivenes­s is peace, really.”

“This event allows us to explore a variety issues that we in contempora­ry society face — domestic terrorism and the role religion can play at a deep level,” said Executive Director of University Religious Life the Rev. Jordan Lenaghan. “They’re talking about how drawing on religious faith they were able to forgive a heinous violent action against their families.”

A mass shooting is one in which at least four people are killed or injured. This year, 247 mass-shooting incidents have occurred across the country, according to data from the Gun Violence Archive, including one as recent as Thursday in Cincinnati, where three people were killed and two were hospitaliz­ed by a man who went on a shooting rampage at the Fifth Third Center.

Polly Sheppard was in the church the night of the shooting, but she said God spared her life.

“I remember the shots being fired,” she said. “I heard a loud voice shouting of course if was Felicia Sanders saying, “Miss Polly get down, he’s shooting everyone.” And for that I will forever be grateful. Through the grace of God she saved our lives. As I was under the table he approached me and said ‘Did I shoot you yet?’ Then he said ‘I’m not going to shoot you. I’m going to leave you to tell the story.’ Some say the killer spared my life. I don’t accept that. He didn’t let me live. God let me live. He (Roof ) will never get that credit from me.”

Sheppard recalled how the event unfolded that night and how her faith helped her find forgivenes­s in her heart for what happened to her and her community.

“I didn’t need confrontat­ion with Roof,” she said. “What I really focused on was what my faith taught me, and that’s you have to forgive others in order for you to be forgiven. We’ve all been in different situations and messes and God forgave us. You have to in turn forgive who trespasses against you. That’s the only way you can heal. That’s the healing process.”

Sheppard said forgivenes­s is not about letting the person who did wrong off the hook, but allowing herself to let go of the anger she was carrying.

“It gives you that peace of mind and you can actually deal and go forward and feel good about going forward because Dylann is going forward, but if you stay there and harbor all those bad feelings it actually messes you up.”

Rose Simmons, whose father, the Rev. Dr. Daniel Lee Simmons Sr., was killed in the church, said she forgave Roof the moment she saw him on the news, before she knew he had killed her father, but when she learned about it, her forgivenes­s didn’t change. It was something she had been practicing, which her father taught her.

“Forgivenes­s is for your peace and your peace of mind,” Simmons said. “When you come to a situation where you must forgive and you don’t, then it will rob you of that peace and process to move on.”

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 ?? Clare Dignan / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? From left, Rose Simmons, Polly Sheppard and the Rev. Anthony Thompson at Quinnipiac University Friday speaking about forgivenes­s as survivors of the mass shooting at a South Carolina church in 2015.
Clare Dignan / Hearst Connecticu­t Media From left, Rose Simmons, Polly Sheppard and the Rev. Anthony Thompson at Quinnipiac University Friday speaking about forgivenes­s as survivors of the mass shooting at a South Carolina church in 2015.
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