Boston Sunday Globe

A year after Buffalo supermarke­t killings, city’s Black youth still shaken

Massacre carried out by white supremacis­t

- By Carolyn Thompson

BUFFALO, N.Y. — It’s hard for Jamari Shaw, 16, to have fun at the park with his younger brothers in their East Buffalo neighborho­od. He’s too busy scanning for danger, an aftereffec­t of a gunman’s attack that killed 10 Black people at a local grocery store.

Sometimes, 17-year-old Alanna Littleton stays in the car when her family drives to that supermarke­t from their home just down the street.

“It’s such a level of tension,” Littleton said.

As the city on Sunday marks one year since the racist massacre, many young Black people in Buffalo are grappling with a shaken sense of personal security and complicate­d feelings about how their community was targeted.

While the white supremacis­t got life in prison for the killings, others face a lifetime of healing.

“I’m definitely gonna carry this with me,” Shaw said after school last week.

On May 14, 2022, an 18-yearold emerged from his car and began shooting people at the Tops Family Market, with the stated goal of killing as many Black people as possible. He wore body armor and live streamed as he fired on shoppers and workers, killing 10 and wounding three more.

The killer from Conklin, N.Y., a small town about 200 miles from Buffalo, wrote online that his motivation was preserving white power in the United States, and that he chose to target Buffalo’s East Side because it had a large percentage of Black residents.

Since the mass shooting, Shaw notices emptier basketball courts in his neighborho­od. People seem to stay inside more. He feels a hesitancy to drop into Tops now to get water or Gatorade before sports practice like he used to — a gnawing feeling of danger anywhere, from anyone.

“The fact that [the shooter] wasn’t that much older, it’s really taken a toll,” said Shaw, who feels especially protective of his four siblings, the youngest of whom is 5. “You get to thinking, ‘Who’s going to do what?’ It could be your best friend. You just never know.”

It’s on 17-year-old Abijah Johnson’s mind when he walks near the store.

“I get the sense of like, ‘What am I doing here? Didn’t 10 people die over here with my skin color from a racist person?’” he said at a recent conference put together by the family of shooting victim Ruth Whitfield, who was 86.

The oldest of those killed, Whitfield died buying seeds for her garden after spending time with her husband at a nursing home. Among the other victims was a man getting a birthday cake for his 3-year-old son, a church deacon helping people get home with their groceries, a popular community activist, and a retired Buffalo police officer who was working as a security guard.

“It was really hard to watch my family grieve like this; also to understand Black people anywhere are just under constant threat. It’s so sad,” Whitfield’s great-granddaugh­ter, Nia Funderburg, 19, said at the conference. “I hate carrying this pain for us.”

Wayne Jones’s mother, Celestine Chaney, was among those killed. A youth football coach, he said the discussion­s Black families often have with their sons about how to interact with law enforcemen­t have broadened.

“That conversati­on that you have with young Black males about police? Now, it’s watch everybody,” he said, describing how even grocery shopping, an activity he enjoyed with his mother, puts him on high alert.

Shaw holds out hope that the community's lingering pain will eventually lessen, but he can’t fathom ever understand­ing what motivated the shooter.

“We come together, we rejoice, we feast together, all that,” he said. “And then to have somebody — it doesn’t matter that he’s white — he just he did it out of spite.

“It’s bigger than race,” Shaw said, “it’s more like a mentality.”

The shooter ‘wasn’t that much older, it’s really taken a toll. You get to thinking, “Who’s going to do what?” It could be your best friend. You just never know.’

JAMARI SHAW, of East Buffalo, who is 16

 ?? JEFFREY T. BARNES/ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
JEFFREY T. BARNES/ASSOCIATED PRESS

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