Sen. Tim Scott got the first call around 9 o’clock on a Wednesday night a year ago. A deputy sheriff told him there were reports of a shooting at Emanuel AME Church in his hometown of Charleston, South Carolina. His first thought was to check in with his friend the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, the church’s pastor.
“I remember picking up the telephone to call Clementa to see what was happening, and it’s probably my last text that I have to him,” Scott said. Sitting in his office on Capitol Hill, he pulled out his phone and scrolled through his messages – all the way down to June 17 of last year.
“It was at 10:31, and I asked him if he was OK,” Scott recalled, clearing his throat. “He never responded. So for me, the pit in my stomach started to grow. Then I got another call that there had been fatalities and I may not be getting a call from him, from Clementa.”
The pain, the suffering, the frustration, the anger . . . and the hopefulness, and the optimism, all mixed together is such a powerful, powerful weapon for good. I think your life can be a weapon or a tool, and we’ve taken an atrocity and made it more into a tool than a weapon.
Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C.
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It was a long night for Rep. Jim Clyburn, the lone Democrat in South Carolina’s delegation in Congress and also a close friend of Pinckney’s.
“I couldn’t sleep, and stayed on the phone and on my computer all night trying to make some sense of it,” Clyburn said. “And then all those people from all over the country were there in Charleston in a matter of hours, and it occurred to me this is huge, this is much bigger.”
A year has passed since a young white supremacist gunned down nine black parishioners during a Wednesday night Bible study at the historic black church.
In the immediate aftermath, the political system moved quickly. After 54 years, the Confederate battle flag came down from the statehouse in Columbia, South Carolina. President Barack Obama delivered a memorable eulogy at Pinckney’s funeral, making headlines around the world with a forceful speech on race and gun violence.
Then, inevitably, it seemed that for many, things went back to normal. The Confederate flag still flew at The Citadel, the state’s famous military college, despite students’ protests. A video in October showing a police officer body-slamming a black high school girl in a South Carolina classroom put the spotlight back on the state. Now, on the one-year anniversary of the tragedy, Scott and Clyburn say they want to make sure that the opening for a dialogue on race relations and reconciliation isn’t wasted.
When I got the phone calls a little after 9 that evening, I just couldn’t even imagine at that time the real magnitude of the tragedy.
Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C.
“The fact of the matter is that 54 years of South Carolina history did not vanish,” Scott said about the removal of the Confederate flag. “So many things in our country, and especially on race relations, have stayed undercover. We have now had a chance to address some of the important issues together, which is a blessing from God and the sacrifice of the Emanuel nine.”
For Scott, a Republican who’s the first African-American senator from the South since Reconstruction, that has mainly meant focusing his efforts on legislation to help distressed communities rise out of poverty, he said.
Clyburn, who as a student leader was active in the civil rights movement in the 1960s, has taken a different approach. He says real change won’t happen unless South Carolina, and the country, treats the tragedy as part of the larger undercurrent of entrenched – and accepted – racism.
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“Dylann Roof didn’t pick that church in isolation. We know he picked that church from the Internet in the days before he carried out this hideous act because he knew the history,” Clyburn said.
In Rep. Mark Sanford’s office on Capitol Hill hangs a photograph taken on the Charleston bridge during a march after the shooting. The picture shows hands, white and black, united during a moment of silence.
“This revolves around movements like Black Lives Matter,” he said. The activists “reacted to the shooting of Walter Scott and others. And then Dylann Roof reacted to Black Lives Matter.”
Clyburn, who with Scott led a civil rights pilgrimage to South Carolina in March, said the message of forgiveness and reconciliation was important but needed to be backed by action.
“How do you differentiate between the Confederate battle flag on the Statehouse in South Carolina and the same battle flag flying at The Citadel?” he asked. Clyburn has been pushing a measure that would remove the banner from the military college.
“I just saw a letter the other day saying I should have better things to do with my time than trying to take this flag down,” Clyburn said. “But I don’t think I have anything better to do than to say to The Citadel, ‘You ought not to be insulting these students you’re preparing to be officers in the U.S. Army.’ ”
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How do you differentiate between the Confederate battle flag on the Statehouse in South Carolina and the same battle flag flying at The Citadel?
Rep. Jim Clyburn, D-S.C.
Rep. Mark Sanford, R-S.C., whose district includes Charleston, said that for him the victims’ legacy was the community’s united response, which made it possible to tackle issues that went “against the accepted political wisdom” of lawmakers.
“That which everybody seemed to consider politically impossible was proven to be quite possible in the blink of an eye,” he said about the removal of the Confederate flag. “The unimaginable, in political terms, changed overnight as a consequence of the response of the families. And if that can change, what else might change in terms of criminal justice reform and race relations?”
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Above the door in his office on Capitol Hill, Sanford keeps a photograph that was taken on the Charleston bridge during a march in the days following the shooting. It shows hands, white and black, united during a moment of silence in honor of the victims with an American flag in the background.
“It was just unbelievably moving, and a noted contrast point in the wake of tragedies in other places,” he said. “Charleston’s response was quite different, and showed that the story was not about the deranged human being who did a horrible thing.”
Vera Bergengruen: 202-383-6036, @verambergen
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