CHAPEL HILL, North Carolina — More than a thousand students, faculty and members of the community gathered for a vigil in this university town on Wednesday evening to remember and pay tribute to the three young Muslim-Americans who were shot dead in an apartment complex near the campus the day before.
Holding candles as they stood in a sunken courtyard known as “The Pit,” many tried to make sense of the killings of Deah Barakat, 23, his new wife, Yusor Abu-Salha, 21, and her sister Razan Abu-Salha, 19. A slideshow ran of happier times — smiling faces, the couple’s wedding, a basketball game, a hike near a waterfall.
“I’m just in disbelief,” said Serene Ahmad, an 18-year-old family friend of the victims. “I just lost three of the best people I’ve met. Every time you saw them, you’d never feel remorse or pain. They’d bring a special light into the room.”
Craig Stephen Hicks, 46, of Chapel Hill has been charged with three counts of first-degree murder and is in police custody. Authorities said on Tuesday that a preliminary investigation into the deaths suggested the killings may have been the result of a simmering parking dispute but have not ruled out the possibility that it may have also been hate motivated.
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Barakat, a second-year student at UNC-Chapel Hill’s School of Dentistry, had married Abu-Salha in December. The new bride had planned to start her dental studies at the same school this fall while younger sister Razan was an undergraduate at the nearby North Carolina State University studying architecture, according to authorities and school officials. Barakat had been fundraising for a trip this summer to Turkey, where he was going to provide dental care to Syrian refugees. After his death, many took to his fundraising page to donate and to express sympathy.
The shootings have sparked concern that Barakat and the Abu-Salha sisters were targeted because they were Muslim, with the hashtag #MuslimLivesMatter going viral after the news of the killings surfaced. Hicks, on his Facebook page, had a history of posting anti-religious articles and photos.
When asked if he thought the deaths stemmed from race, Barakat’s older brother, Farris, 24, told msnbc before the vigil, “I think so. My family thinks so.”








