Fort Hood rampage brings prayers, questions
Mourners gather Sunday to remember the 13 dead and 29 wounded
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Fort Hood community marks solemn Sunday Nov. 8: As the investigation into the shooting at the Army post continues, local residents came together to show their true colors in the aftermath of tragedy. NBC’s Janet Shamlian reports. Nightly News |
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New details on suspected Fort Hood shooter Nov. 9: President Obama plans to travel to Fort Hood tomorrow to honor the men and women who died in the massacre there. Meanwhile, possible red flags about the suspected shooter are swirling. NBC’s Janet Shamlian reports. Today show |
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FORT HOOD, Texas - An Army chaplain asked mourners Sunday to pray for the accused Fort Hood shooter, calling on them to focus less on why the tragedy happened and more on helping each other through "the valley of the shadow of darkness."
"Lord, all those around us search for motive, search for meaning, search for something, someone to blame. That is so frustrating," Col. Frank Jackson told a group of about 120 people gathered at one of the post's chapel. "Today, we pause to hear from you. So Lord, as we pray together, we focus on things we know."
Worshippers at the 1st Cavalry Memorial Chapel hugged each other and raised their hands in prayer during the service, in which Jackson asked the congregation to pray for the 13 dead and 29 wounded that Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan is accused of shooting. The chaplain also urged the crowd to pray for Hasan and his family "as they find themselves in a position that no person ever desires to be — to try and explain the unexplainable."
"Our prayer is that you will use us and this faith community to be a catalyst for healing and reconciliation," Jackson said. "Give us listening ears, open eyes and hearts, and confidence in the presence of your holy spirit as we journey together with all those around us through this valley of the shadow of darkness."
Lieberman calls for probe
Meanwhile, a leading lawmaker said he plans to begin a congressional investigation to determine whether the shootings constitute a terrorist attack.
Sen. Joe Lieberman, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, said on "Fox News Sunday" that he wants to find out whether the Army missed warning signs that Hasan was becoming extreme.
"If Hasan was showing signs, saying to people that he had become an Islamist extremist, the U.S. Army has to have zero tolerance," said Lieberman, an independent from Connecticut. "He should have been gone."
Across the sprawling post and in neighboring Killeen, soldiers, their relatives and members of the community struggled to make sense of the shootings. Candles burned Saturday night outside the apartment complex where Hasan lived. Small white crosses, one for each of the dead, dotted a lawn at a Killeen church on Sunday.
At least 16 victims remained hospitalized with gunshot wounds, and seven were in intensive care.
Military post moving forward
Even as the community took time to mourn the victims at worship services on and off the post, Fort Hood spokesman Col. John Rossi acknowledged that the country's largest military installation was moving forward with its usual business of soldiering. The processing center where Hasan allegedly opened fire on Thursday remains a crime scene, but the activities that went on there were relocated, with the goal of reopening the center as soon as Sunday.
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But the specter of the shooting lingers on the post. Rossi acknowledged that psychic wounds could be deep.
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