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People pray in front of the Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, S.C., on July 17, 2015, the one-month anniversary of the mass shooting at the church. People pray in front of the Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, S.C., on July 17, 2015, the one-month anniversary of the mass shooting at the church. John Moore/Getty Images

Forgiveness. It was the main thing that stuck out, and one of the few things outsiders didn’t understand about Charleston, S.C., last year. How could so many who’d lost so much forgive then-21-year-old Dylann Roof after he allegedly shot and killed nine African-American worshippers during Bible study at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church? Only five people survived the carnage.

And yet, forgive is what so many did.

“The research and interviews helped broaden our understanding of how forgiveness is possible,” Marjory Wentworth wrote in an email to The Root. “The deep faith that these individuals lived by is what most of us aspire to, and it honors the people who were at Bible study that night.”

Forgiveness is a theme in We Are Charleston: Tragedy and Triumph at Mother Emanuel, a book based on extensive interviews with family and friends of the nine church members who died in the shooting. Written by Wentworth, veteran journalist Herb Frazier and College of Charleston history professor Bernard Edward Powers Jr., it examines the history of the beloved institution known as “Mother Emanuel,” the history of the AME Church, and how the city itself is dealing with the fallout from this racially tinged tragedy.

One of “the Emanuel Nine,” the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, talked about forgiveness before he was killed. In the wake of the death of Walter Scott, an unarmed black man shot and killed by a police officer in North Charleston in April 2015, Pinckney pushed for a law requiring police to wear body cameras. Of the shooting death, Frazier said, Pinckney spoke about how love must be extended to both Scott’s family and to the officer who shot him.

“Many of the relatives who offered forgiveness stated that it’s what their loved ones would want,” Wentworth wrote. “That speaks volumes. They were the best of us. We can learn from this. It is central to Christian beliefs, and yet it is so rare.”

On that June day when Roof allegedly shot and killed those who became known as “the Emanuel Nine,” the effect was profound.

“I reacted physically. I fell over in disbelief,” recalled Wentworth, South Carolina’s poet laureate. “It was terrifying.”

“I don’t think I had any thoughts. In the moments right after, I was thinking and praying that it was not as bad as it could potentially be,” remembered Frazier, a former member of Mother Emanuel. The journalist rushed over to the church where he had spent the first 14 years of his life, but went home amid reports that the shooter was still at large and watched the news coverage on television. “There was more disbelief. Then, the next day, you think about what we can do collectively to put this in perspective.”

Frazier explained that one of the big questions the authors had was why this happened.

“There’s no doubt he was influenced by the Jim Crow segregated South, and the things that he was reading … provided the fuel to inspire the hatred within him,” Frazier said. “Now, who might have been his teacher to tell him of the importance of this church … we don’t know.”

The AME Church—the largest body of African-American Methodists, with 7.5 million members worldwide—has been an important voice for civil rights throughout its history. Mother Emanuel was investigated in 1822 when one of its founders, Denmark Vesey, organized a major slave uprising in Charleston. Authorities learned of the plot before the rebellion took place, and it was squashed. It is the oldest AME church in the Deep South, Frazier said, and its leadership played an important role during the civil rights struggle with sit-ins at lunch counters along King Street, and also in the battles over desegregation.

With the one-year anniversary of the massacre upon us, the authors say that both the city and Mother Emanuel are still healing.

There are nearly weekly events commemorating the tragedy, and part of Calhoun Street outside the church has been renamed Mother Emanuel Memorial Way. On June 17, the anniversary of the killings, Frazier’s wife will host Soul Healing by the Sea, a peaceful event where there will be music and where people can contemplate the tragedy. But tensions remain in Charleston, partly because of the racial history of the city and of South Carolina.

“There certainly is hope, and the city has held together, but the systemic issues that come from long-standing racist policies still exist,” Wentworth said, ticking off a list: “Gentrification and lack of affordable housing; failing, often segregated schools; huge cuts in school funding, which always affects minority populations most.”

A poll released this month by the University of South Carolina’s Institute for Public Service and Policy Research (pdf) showed that a year after the shooting, whites were more than twice as likely as blacks to think race relations had improved as a result of the shooting. But more than a third of African Americans polled said that race relations had gotten somewhat worse or much worse since then. Still, the authors of We Are Charleston are encouraged by the changes they’ve seen in the city since the killings.

“It takes tremendous strength to let love win. In Charleston, we have shown it is possible,” Wentworth said. “It leads to peace. We can only get there together.”

Allison Keyes is an award-winning correspondent, host and author. She can be heard on CBS Radio News and WTOP News Radio, among other outlets. Keyes, a former national desk reporter for NPR, has written extensively on race, culture, politics and the arts.

IBW21

IBW21 (The Institute of the Black World 21st Century) is committed to enhancing the capacity of Black communities in the U.S. and globally to achieve cultural, social, economic and political equality and an enhanced quality of life for all marginalized people.