Bells tolled across the city yesterday as thousands linked up on a towering bridge and a historic sanctuary reopened in displays of unity.
Residents repeated messages of solidarity, love and even defiance of evil at the remembrances, hopeful their expressions would drown out the hate embodied in the slayings at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church.
Authorities say a white gunman was welcomed into a bible study last week at the historic black church before making racist remarks and shooting nine people to death.
During the service, many stood some holding small children to shout their praises or raise their hands toward the church's vaulted ceiling. For added security, police officers stood watch over worshippers.
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Later yesterday, thousands of people gathered on either side of the city's iconic Arthur Ravenel Jr Bridge and marched across in a showing of solidarity and healing. Underneath the more than three-kilometer span with towering cable supports, dozens of boats gathered and blew their air horns in support, while cars honked as they passed on the bridge.
The slayings have renewed calls for the flag to be removed from the South Carolina Statehouse grounds, in part because photographs of suspect Dylann Roof in a purported manifesto showed him holding Confederate flags. The 2,500-word manifesto also contained hate-filled writings.
Less than three kilometers from Emanuel, someone vandalised a Confederate monument, spray-painting "Black Lives Matter" on the statue. City workers used a tarp to cover up the graffiti, police said.