Thousands join hands for Charleston bridge 'unity chain'
Charleston
Thousands of people gathered onto one of the longest bridges in the Americas on Sunday and joined hands in a solidarity with the victims of the Charleston church massacre.
From Charleston to suburban Mount Pleasant, they formed a line across the Cooper River to forge what organizers called a Bridge to Peace Unity Chain nearly 2.5 miles (four kilometers) long.
"It's not black lives that matter anymore. All lives matter," said Black Lives Matter leader Jay Johnson to loud cheers from a mainly white crowd before the event kicked off.
"We are united as the human race," he said, stripping off his thick dark Black Lives Matter sweatshirt in the early evening heat and humidity.
Promoted on social media, the event was organized in a matter of days by local housewives and the chief of Mount Pleasant's police department.
"This incredible turnout says it all," said organizer Dorsey Fairbairn at the event, where a bagpiper played "Amazing Grace," a chaplain read a prayer, and vehicles crossing the span honked their horns in solidarity.
Once up on the Arthur Ravenel Bridge and holding hands, participants observed nine minutes of silence -- one for each of the victims of Wednesday's bloodbath at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church.
The span, named for a South Carolina politician who once described the NAACP civil rights group as mentally retarded, is the third-longest cable-stayed bridge in the Western Hemisphere.
The mood was a joyful counterpoint to the somber atmosphere that loomed over a two-hour Sunday service at the historic African-American sanctuary earlier in the day.
A 21-year-old white male from South Carolina's interior, Dylann Roof, is charged with nine counts of murder in connection with the Emanuel church shooting, which he reportedly hoped would ignite racial conflict.
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