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Route 91 Harvest Festival: The World Shines a Light for Victims
The Fallen Are Memorialized and Wounded Honored in Vigils Around the World
Country music is an industry, and it is a community. But more than anything, it’s family.
And that family has been unified as the world mourns with the 59
families who lost loved ones and lifts up the 527 victims who were
wounded in Sunday’s (Oct. 1) massacre at the Route 91 Harvest music
festival in Las Vegas.
On Monday (Oct. 2), much of the world’s landmarks went dark to honor the
innocent lives that were senselessly cut short in what is now the
deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history. Much of the Las Vegas
Strip went dark along with New York’s Empire State Building and the
Eiffel Tower in Paris. A single ring of orange light at the World Trade
Center glowed to honor the victims.
Memorial vigils were held in Gainesville, Florida, Savannah, Georgia, at
the University of Nevada, and near the Route 91 festival grounds.
In Nashville, Charles Esten, star of CMT’s Nashville emceed a
candlelight vigil at the Ascend Amphitheater with Vince Gill, Amy Grant,
Keith Urban, Alison Krauss, Mayor Megan Barry, the Cox Family, the
Grand Ole Opry’s Senior Vice President and General Manager Sally
Williams.
Throughout downtown, the Tennessee state and American flags flew at
half-staff. And starlings sang while they roosted on electrical wires
hanging over the outdoor venue. Overcast clouds hung overhead as
mourners struggled to keep their candles lit in the wind.
Toward the end of the vigil, Esten made the observation that the candles
mourners held in their hands were not the ones that mattered. “You go
out and you be the light,” he said. “You let your light shine into
somebody’s life through your giving, through your acts and through your
love. That is something that wind can’t blow out and darkness cannot
quench.”
Before Urban delivered a moving rendition of Simon and Garfunkel’s
“Bridge Over Troubled Water,” he mentioned that he had spent much of the
day shell shocked by the tragedy. “Our nine-year-old,” Urban said, “as I
was driving her to school this morning said to me, ‘Dad, you seem
quiet,’ I said, ‘Yeah, there was a lot of people killed last night.’
“And she said, ‘Did you know any of them?’ I said, ‘Not that I know
of.’ And she said, ‘Well then why are you so sad?’ I said, ‘Well, first
of all, these were innocent people horrifically taken and secondly,
they’re like family.’
“It’s the one thing about country music that has been at the center
of it and it is community. It’s about community. And so I did know those
people in that way and I feel very grateful for this moment tonight to
be able to put some light in the world,” he said.
Gill performed “Go Rest High On That Mountain” and said he felt honored
to be present as a voice for the innocent. “May we never lose our
voice,” he said. “May we never lose our voice for innocent people.”
Grant led the crowd in prayer and moments of silence for the victims,
the wounded and all the people rebuilding their lives in the wake of the
tragedy. “Give us the grace God every day to see each other,” she said,
“to see our differences, to see our similarities, to observe to learn
rather than judge and to fill our hearts with courage to not be afraid.”
Barry mentioned that the event marked the second consecutive Monday
that Nashville had held a vigil following a mass shooting. On Sept. 25,
the city held a vigil for the eight people injured and Melanie
Crow-Smith, 39, who died in a shooting at the Burnette Chapel Church of
Christ in the nearby suburb of Antioch.
“These were people who had so much to give,” she said. “So many more
years spread out in front of them and so much more to share. All of
those possibilities are now gone. We can’t bring them back, and we don’t
have the answers right now. We may never have all the answers. But we
can do a couple of things to honor the memory of every victim.
“We can pray for them in their time of sorrow and their time of
despair. And we can do everything in our power as citizens and community
leaders to promote peace, to pursue good over evil, to pursue light
over darkness and to pursue love over hate because we do know one thing.
Love is the answer. And it is the only choice that we have. Love is the
most awesome power that we know.”
Another prayer by Sidney Cox of the Cox Family preceded a performance of “Amazing Grace” led by Krauss.
“Right now we’re caring about family and we are reaching out and
letting them know that we do care about them,” Esten said at the start
of the vigil. “One of the things I discovered about this town–or
discovered about music, I should say–is that yes it’s entertainment, but
it’s so much more than that. Music is a way to carry out beyond past
where words work, and music can bring healing.”
As vigil attendees left the amphitheater, the Nashville city lights
glowed in red, white and blue for the victims of the Route 91 Harvest
music festival in Las Vegas.
To support those affected by the tragedy in Las Vegas, the Nashville
nonprofit the Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee has set up a Music City Cares Fund. One hundred percent of donations to the Fund will benefit the immediate and long-term needs of the victims.
CMT’s philanthropic initiative CMT One Country
is supporting the Red Cross in the wake of this mass shooting. Our
hearts are with everyone affected by the tragedy. If you are trying to
locate loved one, please call the Red Cross hotline: 1-866-535-5654.
If you are in Nevada and would like to donate blood, please go to www.bloodhero.com to find out where to give.
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