LEWISTON, Maine — Elizabeth Seal, whose husband Joshua was killed in the deadliest shooting in Maine history, told a crowd of mourners Friday that the tragedy that rocked their city a year ago also created a community that has only grown stronger with time.
''These connections, just like a spiderweb, are beautiful. I wish it didn't take a tragedy for me to discover these connections,'' Seal said through an American Sign Language interpreter, adding that the community would ''forever be Lewiston strong.''
Seal made the remarks at a memorial service that drew more than 1,000 people to the city's hockey arena The Colisée, where Maine residents whose sense of safety was shattered last year by the mass shooting marked the anniversary.
The killings of 18 people by an Army reservist in Lewiston drove home the stark reality that no corner of the country is safe from gun violence, including a state where people often boast of the low crime rate.
Mourners held two moments of silence during the ceremony Friday evening at the precise time the shootings took place at two separate locations.
At the event, some people clutched teddy bears handed out by the American Red Cross. At the front of the stage were 18 chairs, each with a blue heart containing a victim's name, along with a candle and white flowers. Names of each victim were read aloud with an image projected onto video screens.
A local museum was collecting mementos and other items related to the tragedy. Among the items left behind was a single shoe from a survivor who lost the shoe's mate on the night of the shooting. Other items included a pair of bowling shoes.
Earlier Friday, Arthur Barnard, the father of shooting victim Artie Strout, said it was a day of grieving for his family and others but also a day of action in the campaign for tougher risk protection orders in the state.