80°F
weather icon Clear

Victims of Orlando shooting mourned at candlelight vigil

Early Sunday morning Omar Mateen walked into Pulse, a gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, and killed 49 people using a semi-automatic rifle and a 9mm semi-automatic pistol. A day later, 2,000 miles away from the site of the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history, residents of Boulder City and Las Vegas gathered for a vigil by the duck pond in Veterans’ Memorial Park.

The gathering of 15 people was their way to show solace and grieve for victims at the nightclub and members of the LGBT community who experienced violence.

“How long, oh God, must we wait for an end to the violence against the LGBT community?” said Rev. Sandy Johnson of Boulder City United Methodist Church. “We mourn for the victims in Orlando.”

As the mourners encircled a small area near the pond, they spoke about the need to not go on as business as usual.

“It is important that we don’t skip past this event,” Johnson said. “Already this morning I saw people posting on Facebook as if nothing had ever happened. We can’t look past this event. What happened in Orlando is a symptom of our country. We need to grieve and we need to be angry about this.”

The vigil participants took Johnson’s words to heart; they were in grief and they were angry.

At one point Boulder City resident Leesha Nush broke down, unable to contain her emotion. “How can we stand here and be so calm when all these people were massacred?” Nush said, her eyes red from tears as Johnson consoled her.

Members of the LGBT community in attendance spoke about the fears they have about growing up as gay individuals.

Marny Robanson, vice president of PFLAG of Boulder City, recalled growing up as a lesbian in Texas and the fear she felt being in a place that did not accept her.

“When I was growing up in Texas, gay bars were all in one area and people would leave for the bar and never come home,” Robanson said.

Lynn Barringer, PFLAG of Boulder City events coordinator, said she fears more attacks against the LGBT community.

“Sometimes I feel like we are just fish in a barrel,” Barringer said. “This is not over, and unless something changes there will be another attack on our community.”

Robanson said she believes there are still people who wish to hurt members of the LGBT community.

“What happened in Orlando can happen anywhere,” she said. “It can happen to anyone who is an out and proud person.”

As the vigil continued, participants bowed their heads and listened as each person named a victim and told the group about that person.

They mentioned Jonathan Antonio Camuy Vega, who worked for Telemundo in Orlando. They spoke of Shane Evan Tomlinson, a member of the band Frequency. They spoke of Antonio Davon Brown, a captain in the U.S. Army Reserve.

“I think we see a common theme with these people,” Kathleen Wood said. “They all were proud of themselves and had such big smiles.”

At the end of the vigil the group came together for one last long embrace. They held each other tight. Some participants needed comforting and others needed to comfort; some cried and others stood stiff lipped and strong.

The vigil could not bring back the dead and it could not ensure that something like this would never happen again, but for a brief moment by the duck pond, the small group from a small city could share its grief with a city in Florida 2,000 miles away.

Contact reporter Max Lancaster at mlancaster @bouldercityreview.com or at 702-586-9401. Follow him on Twitter @MLancasterBCR.

MOST READ
LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
THE LATEST
Toll Brothers gets split decision

The development of the area near Boulder Creek Golf Course known as Tract 350 (the sale of which is slated to pay for the majority of the planned replacement for the aging municipal pool) may have hit a snag last week as the planning commission voted 5-1 to deny the developers’ request to build houses closer to the street than is allowed under current law.

Council gives nod to 185 new hangars

There is at least one part of Boulder City that is set to see growth in the coming years. A lot of growth.

Boulder City ready to celebrate America

Boulder City resident James Cracolici may have put it best when he called the annual July 4 Damboree, “The crown jewel of all events held in Boulder City.”

BC can ban backyard breeders

Although there is nothing on any city agenda yet, the resolution of the issue of whether pet breeding will be allowed in Boulder City took a huge step forward last week as Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford released an official opinion on the intent and limitations of state law that had been requested by city staff last year.

Completion dates for two road projects pushed back

Mayor Joe Hardy tacitly acknowledged that Boulder City gets, perhaps, more than its fair share of funding from the Regional Transportation Commission, given the city’s size.

Businesses recognized at Chamber awards night

The Boulder City Chamber of Commerce’s annual installation and awards night featured many business owners in town and even had an appearance, albeit an A.I.-generated one, by Audrey Hepburn.

Parallel parking approved

Like so many other things in the world of Boulder City government, the issue of reconfiguring parking in the historic downtown area along Nevada Way, which generated enough heat to cause council members to delay a decision up until the last possible moment, ended with more of a whimper than a bang.

Ways to reduce summer power bills

Now that the thermometer is on the rise outdoors, the cost to cool homes and businesses on the inside is doing the same.