Virginia Tech tragedy reflects gun violence epidemic
Virginia Tech's picturesque campus in the Blue Ridge
Mountains became the scene of the deadliest shooting rampage in modern
U.S. history on April 16. A student gunman massacred 32 people before
killing himself. A UMNS file photo by Maile Bradfield.
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By United Methodist News Service
April 17, 2007
Jim Winkler
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As they grieved for victims of the deadly shooting rampage at Virginia
Tech, United Methodist leaders condemned U.S. gun laws as lax and
questioned why Congress allowed a federal ban on the sale of 19 types of
semiautomatic weapons to expire in 2004.
The social action agency of The United Methodist Church also renewed
the church's call for governments around the world to ban ownership by
the general public of handguns, assault weapons, automatic weapon
conversion kits and weapons that cannot be detected by traditional
metal-detection devices.
"...Had this ban been in place, this shooting might have been
prevented since one of the guns used by the assailant was a 9-mm
handgun," said Jim Winkler, chief executive of the United Methodist
Board of Church and Society.
"We once again call on the Congress to ban all handguns and assault
weapons so that our communities will be safer and so that this endless
cycle of violence can be ended," Winkler said in an April 17 statement,
one day after the shootings in Blacksburg, Va., left 33 people dead.
A Virginia Tech student identified as Cho Seung-Hui, 23, shot and
killed 30 people in a building of classrooms and offices on campus and
is believed to be responsible for the earlier killings of two people in a
dormitory. Fifteen people were wounded, and the gunman took his own
life.
"What is indeed tragic is the fact that this violence is commonplace
in U.S. society," Winkler said. "In 2005, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation reports that there were 10,100 deaths by firearms in the
United States. This represents an average of four deaths for every
100,000 people in the United States. By contrast, England, Wales,
Scotland, and Canada averaged .54 deaths for every 100,000 people.
"The presence of guns in U.S. society has not led to greater security but in fact has undermined the general sense of safety."
"What is indeed tragic is the fact that this violence is commonplace in U.S. society."
-Jim Winkler
Currently, most states do not require gun owners to be licensed or
guns to be registered. Most states also allow the purchase of guns at
gun shows without background checks and do not update criminal history
databases in a timely manner, allowing criminals to obtain firearms.
The United Methodist Church officially supports regulation of the
importation, manufacturing, sale and possession of guns and ammunition.
The church's resolution on gun violence in the denomination’s 2004 Book of Resolutions
points to the significant risk of handgun violence, especially to young
people. "Our communities and schools are so exposed to large numbers of
privately owned guns that no mere attempts at providing slightly better
security can match the awful threat of guns finding their way through
our well-intentioned safety systems."
Epidemic of gun violence
The Rev. Bob Edgar, a United Methodist pastor who is the leader of
the National Council of Churches, said the Virginia Tech massacre
reflects an epidemic of gun violence in the United States.
The Rev. Bob Edgar
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"My pastor's heart breaks for the families of those who died today,"
Edgar said in a statement released April 16. "I pray for them and for
those who witnessed the unspeakable violence that destroyed the peace of
a spring day on a scenic campus at the foot of the Blue Ridge Mountains
of southwestern Virginia."
A former U.S. congressman, Edgar said faith leaders have frequently
spoken up about the epidemic of gun violence. "Despite repeated calls
from faith and community leaders to Congress and presidents, nothing
ever seems to get done to stem the tide," he said.
"How many more will have to die before we say enough is enough? How
many more senseless deaths will have to be counted before we enact
meaningful firearms control in this country? How many more of our
pastors, rabbis and imams will have to preside over caskets of innocent
victims of gun violence because a nation refused to stop the
proliferation of these small weapons of mass destruction?"
Edgar pointed to the National Council of Churches' 1967 policy
calling for firearms control and a March 2000 interfaith campaign urging
an end to the epidemic of gun violence.
"The escalation of gun violence compels us to call for an end to the
manufacture and easy distribution of such instruments of destruction,"
Edgar said in 2000, reiterating that statement after the Virginia Tech
shootings.
Concern around the world
The Rev. Samuel Kobia, a Methodist from Kenya who serves as chief
executive of the World Council of Churches, pointed out that disbelief
and grief over the sorrowful tragedy in Virginia must translate into
action.
"Today and in the days to come, national leaders, state leaders and
the gun lobby across the USA must hear more than the latest outburst of
anger at violence in America," he said in an April 16 statement. "They
must also begin to understand the rising frustration among concerned
citizens and governments around the world.
The Rev. Samuel Kobia
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"The World Council of Churches has 347 member churches in over 100
countries. For many of them the news from Virginia today is little
different than the news from Darfur yesterday and the news from Iraq
tomorrow. They see wanton killings, the indiscriminate use of armed
force and the widespread availability of deadly weapons."
Kobia noted that U.S. arms manufacturing and arms sales policies have
violent consequences abroad as well as in the United States. He called
for firm controls on the small arms trade.
"We are all Virginians in our sympathy, but many people around the
world are also Virginians in their vulnerability to the misuse of
unregulated guns," he said. "Each day, about 1,000 of them die from gun
violence and many more are injured."
The R. Rev. Randy Day, chief executive of the United Methodist Board
of Global Ministries, said the Virginia Tech carnage shows the impact of
violence on families and society in general.
"The rampage in Blacksburg offers further indication of too many
guns, too freely available in this country and around the world," Day
said.
News media contact: Linda Bloom, New York, (646) 369-3759 or newsdesk@umcom.org.
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Minnesota Annual Conference calls gun law unconstitutional
Resources
Board of Church and Society
National Council of Churches
World Council of Churches
Book of Resolutions on Gun Violence |