While normalcy seemed to have returned to the city by afternoon yesterday, residents grappled with shock and fear following a day of violence when a car rammed into a crowd peacefully protesting against the rally by white supremacists.
The city in the US state of Virginia has a significant Indian and Indian-American population, but there was no report of anyone from the community being injured in the violence on Saturday.
"It's still difficult for us to understand and grapple with the reality that such a thing has happened. This is not what the city is about," Sankaran Venkataraman, said Senior Associate Dean for Faculty and Research, MasterCard, Professor of Business Administration at the University of Virginia.
Venkataraman has lived in Charlottesville, which is about 120 miles southwest of Washington DC, for nearly 20 years.
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"For something like this to happen is a shock to us. The notions of racism, hatred, bigotry are completely antithetical to the views of most citizens of Charlottesville," Venkataraman, who recently returned from Tamil Nadu, said.
The Virginia university, closed for summer, is set to open in two weeks and students, a sizable number from outside the US, including India, would start arriving next week.
"I am sure there's a sense of anxiety among students here," Venkataraman added.
Annavarapu is also an office-bearer of the Indian Student Association at the varsity. It has about 300 active members.
While he did not leave the campus on Saturday, he had a scary encounter with white supremacists on Friday night when hundreds of them had a surprise rally inside the campus.
"They came like right there," Annavarapu said, pointing to the place inside the campus where the gathering happened.
"It was frightening," he said.
The protesters were openly carrying guns, including AK- 47, reports said.
Annavarapu feels the election of Donald Trump, who has a following among the white supremacists, as the US president has encourage the far-right groups.
"It's not like these views are anything new, it's just that now people feel as if they have the authority to come into public and wave them around, as if they're not doing anything wrong. I understand that they have free speech, but that doesn't give them the right to incite violence," he said.
"I was just crossing the street and this pickup truck rolled up on me. And they just slammed me down face first, stomped me and then just drove," he said.
Goedde, who recently returned to his home town after 11 years in Montreal, said many others faced similar situation.
"I wasn't the only one that described this scene. When I went to the ER (emergency room at the hospital) last night, it was full of people. Like with injuries. All of the staff were just, they were tired. They were covered in blood," he said.
For eminent Indologist and resident of Charlottesville Daniel J Ehnbom, it was terrible experience. "The principle blame is with the neo-Nazis, because they deliberately set up to make trouble and they did. It's a very sad thing for Charlottesville. People are still shocked," Ehnbom said.
"The fact that this manifest itself in (Thomas) Jefferson's hometown is horrifying," Ehnbom said, referring to the third president of the United States and the principal author of the Declaration of Independence.
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