The first hug was stunning enough — a young man embracing his brother’s killer for nearly minute in the middle of the courtroom, just after telling the woman: “I forgive you.”
For some, the hugs and words of understanding were testament to the power of radical compassion, often rooted in religious convictions — “a spirit of forgiveness, faith and trust,” as the Dallas Police Department put it in a Wednesday evening tweet. Nikki Haley, the former U.N. ambassador, called the teen’s hug “an amazing example of faith, love, and forgiveness.”
— Ted Cruz October 2, 2019The conversation that played out on social media as clips of both Brandt Jean and Kemp’s moments with Guyger went viral continued a debate familiar to those who watched or read about a similarly startling scene of mercy four years ago, when loved one after loved one of the victims of white supremacist Dylann Roof — all black parishioners at a church in Charleston, South Carolina — offered prayers and forgiveness just days after Roof’s deadly rampage.
Back in 2015, others found the attitudes of the Charleston shooting victims’ families hard to comprehend. In a New York Times article titled “Why I Can’t Forgive Dylann Roof,” writer Roxane Gay expressed wonder at the reactions and slammed a society she called overeager for the mourners’ compassion. “Did Crystal Mason get a hug when she was sent to jail for voting?” one critic asked on Twitter, referencing a black mother in the same state of Texas who was infamously sentenced to five years in prison for casting a ballot illegally.
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