A Most American Terrorist: The Making of Dylann Roof
A Most American Terrorist: The Making of Dylann Roof
By Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah
August 21, 2017
What are you? a member of the Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston asked at the trial of the white man who killed eight of her fellow black parishioners and their pastor. What kind of subhuman miscreant could commit such evil?... What happened to you, Dylann?
Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah spent months in South Carolina searching for an answer to those questionsspeaking with Roofs mother, father, friends, former teachers, and victims family members, all in an effort to unlock what went into creating one of the coldest killers of our time. Sitting beside the church, drinking from a bottle of Smirnoff Ice, he thought he had to go in and shoot them.
They were a small prayer groupa rising-star preacher, an elderly minister, eight women, one young man, and a little girl. But to him, they were a problem. He believed that, as black Americans, they were raping our women and are taking over our country. So he took out his Glock handgun and calmly, while their eyes were closed in prayer, opened fire on the 12 people gathered in the basement of Mother Emanuel AME Church and shot almost every single one of them dead.
Felicia Sanders, one of the few survivors, told the courtroom early on that Roof belonged in the pit of hell. Months later, she said that because of him she can no longer close her eyes to pray. She can't stand to hear the sound of firecrackers, or even the patter of acorns falling. Because of Dylann Roof, Felicia Sanders had been forced to play dead by lying in her dying son's blood, while holding her hand over her whimpering grandbaby's mouth. She had pressed her hand down so tight that she said she feared she would suffocate the girl. Eighteen months later, Felicia Sanders pointed that same hand toward Dylann Roof in the courtroom and said, with no doubt in her voice at all, that it was simplethat man there was pure evil.
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https://www.gq.com/story/dylann-roof-making-of-an-american-terrorist
tblue37
(65,318 posts)hlthe2b
(102,222 posts)I wish I could say I took some hope from it, but after Charlottesville it is hard to do. Still, seeing the outpouring of help in Houston, I do know that there are still kind caring people in the world, even in areas where white supremacists may have some presence.