Las Vegas Sun

April 25, 2024

guest column:

Maybe this time things will change

Maybe it was white rage that provoked a young man to kill nine innocent worshipers as they prayed. Maybe it was mental illness or some other twisted motivation. The one thing about which there can be no debate is that he had a gun.

The gun is what ties the unspeakable atrocity in Charleston, S.C., to the long and apparently neverending list of mass shootings in this country. We know them by their place names — Newtown, Aurora, Tucson, Virginia Tech, Columbine, Navy Yard. They rivet the nation’s attention for days or weeks; then they fade and we do nothing. Perhaps this time will be different. I want to be hopeful, but I’m not optimistic.

The man who allegedly made a killing ground of historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church was identified as Dylann Storm Roof, 21, and described as a white supremacist. Charleston officials said from the beginning that this horror appeared to be a hate crime. A photo on Roof’s Facebook page shows him wearing a jacket with patches depicting the flags of apartheid-era South Africa and Rhodesia.

The target was one of the nation’s oldest and most storied black houses of worship, known by Charlestonians as “Mother Emanuel.” The congregation was established in 1816 by free men and women of color. One of the founding members was Denmark Vesey, who in 1822 organized what would have been the biggest slave revolt in the nation’s history. The plot was discovered, Vesey was executed, and vengeful whites burned the original church building to the ground.

The church was rebuilt, but parishioners had to start meeting secretly in 1834, when all black churches in the state were outlawed, until after the Civil War. The present church building, with its Gothic-style windows and great soaring steeple, dates to 1891. Like other prominent black churches across the South, Mother Emanuel played a role as an organizational hub during the long struggle for civil rights. Booker T. Washington spoke there in 1909; the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. visited in 1962.

Among the victims of last week’s carnage was Mother Emanuel’s pastor, the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, a theological and political prodigy who began preaching at 13 and won election to the South Carolina House of Representatives at 23. After moving up to the state Senate, Pinckney became the most visible champion of a bill to require police officers to wear body cameras. He was eloquent, charismatic and effective. Now he is gone.

My mother’s side of the family came from Charleston. My great-great-grandfather, Henry Fordham, somehow became a “free person of color” before the Civil War and established a blacksmith’s shop not far from where Mother Emanuel stands. So yes, this tragedy feels personal. I couldn’t sleep last Wednesday night, thinking about the terror those innocent victims were forced to experience in their final moments.

Speaking from the White House, President Barack Obama quoted King about the need for all of us to move “from the fatigue of despair to the buoyancy of hope.” I want desperately to believe the aftermath of this mass shooting will be different. But I have to be realistic.

“I’ve had to make statements like this too many times,” Obama said. The common factor in all these incidents, he said, is that “someone who wanted to inflict harm had no trouble getting their hands on a gun.”

I wish we could eradicate racism and the delusion of white supremacy, but I don’t know how. Is there a difference between setting the church on fire in 1822 and spraying the pews with gunfire nearly two centuries later? The context is vastly altered, of course; today, a multiracial, multicultural city is united in grief. Yet, the racist impulse, however diminished, endures.

I wish we could better address issues of mental health too. Perhaps it should be easier for concerned family members to compel a troubled individual to seek help. But we are not going back to the practice of warehousing large numbers of people in hellish institutions.

What we can do, if we have the will, is make it harder for those who want to kill innocents to obtain firearms. After 20 young children were massacred at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., Congress took up two modest pieces of legislation: a ban on military-style assault weapons, which no hunter needs, and a requirement for universal background checks before buying guns. Both had overwhelming public support. Neither became law.

Can this time be different? Only if we hold Congress, Obama and the presidential candidates of both parties accountable. Only if we remember Mother Emanuel.

Eugene Robinson is a columnist for The Washington Post.

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