unpopularblargh
Member
Via GQ:
”What are you?" a member of the Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston asked at the trial of the white man who killed eight of her fellow black parishioners and their pastor. ”What kind of subhuman miscreant could commit such evil?... What happened to you, Dylann?"
Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah spent months in South Carolina searching for an answer to those questions—speaking with Roof's mother, father, friends, former teachers, and victims' family members, all in an effort to unlock what went into creating one of the coldest killers of our time.
I had come to Charleston intending to write about them, the nine people who were gone. But from gavel to gavel, as I listened to the testimony of the survivors and family members, often the only thing I could focus on, and what would keep me up most nights while I was there, was the magnitude of Dylann Roof's silence, his refusal to even look up, to ever explain why he did what he had done. Over and over again, without even bothering to open his mouth, Roof reminded us that he did not have to answer to anyone. He did not have to dignify our questions with a response or explain anything at all to the people whose relatives he had maimed and murdered. Roof was safeguarded by his knowledge that white American terrorism is never waterboarded for answers, it is never twisted out for meaning, we never identify its ”handlers," and we could not force him to do a thing. He remained inscrutable. He remained in control, just the way he wanted to be.
There is much more at the link above. I'm not sure how I feel about this. In a way it feels like more needless publicity of someone who committed such a heinous crime. On the other hand it is better to know that people like Roof don't pop out of a vacuum, that they're not lone wolves, that there's nothing extraordinary about them.And so, after weeks in the courtroom, and shortly before Dylann Roof was asked to stand and listen to his sentence, I decided that if he would not tell us his story, then I would. Which is why I left Charleston, the site of his crime, and headed inland to Richland County, to Columbia, South Carolina—to find the people who knew him, to see where Roof was born and raised. To try to understand the place where he wasted 21 years of a life until he committed an act so heinous that he became the first person sentenced to die for a federal hate crime in the entire history of the United States of America.