Update: Texas archdiocese, bishops offer healing, support after shooting

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HOUSTON (CNS) — In response to the May 18 school shooting at
a Houston-area high school, Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston said the archdiocesan community would “unite to support and
offer healing to those affected.”

“As
a society, we must strive for a way to end such acts of senseless gun violence
in our schools and communities,” he added in a May 18 statement.

The
cardinal said he was “deeply saddened” and that his prayer and the
prayers of Catholics in the archdiocese are with the “victims and families
of those killed and injured in this horrific tragedy.”

In a separate statement as president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Cardinal DiNardo said: “Our community and
our local church joins an ever-growing list of those impacted by the evil of
gun violence. I extend my heartfelt prayers, along with my brother bishops, for
all of those who have died, their families and friends, those who were injured,
and for our local community.”

The
school shooting, occurring just three months after the shooting in Parkland,
Florida, took place when a male shooter opened fire at a Santa Fe High School the morning
of May 18 killing 10 people, most of them students. Another 10 were reported injured.

A suspect taken into custody was identified as 17-year
old Dimitrios Pagourtzis and another person of interest also was detained
and questioned. Explosive
devices also were found at the school and off campus. 

The shooting
was the deadliest in Texas since a gunman attacked a rural church late last
year, killing more than two dozen people.

“Sadly, I must yet
again point out the obvious brokenness in our culture and society, such that
children who went to school this morning to learn and teachers who went to
inspire them will not come home,” Cardinal DiNardo said in his statement at USCCB president. “We as a nation must, here and now, say
definitively: no more death!”

He prayed that “the Lord of life” would be “with us in our sorrow and show us how to honor the precious gift of life
and live in peace.”

“We
experienced an unthinkable tragedy at our high school this morning,”
Santa Fe Superintendent Leigh Wall said in a message posted to Facebook.

“As
soon as the alarms went off, everybody just started running outside,”
10th-grader Dakota Shrader told reporters, “and next thing you know
everybody looks, and you hear boom, boom, boom, and I just ran as fast as I
could to the nearest floor so I could hide, and I called my mom.”

Another
student told CBS News he ran behind some trees, heard more shots, jumped a
fence and ran to a car wash. He said he saw firefighters treat a girl who had a
bandage around her knee and may have been shot.

Bishop
Michael F. Burbidge of Arlington, Virginia, said in a May 18 tweet: “Please
keep the victims of the Houston-area school shooting in your prayers. Pray also
for their family members and friends who now begin a tragic grieving process.
For those killed, grant eternal rest unto them, O Lord, and bestow grace and
strength to all in their community.”

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