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As the sun rose over Washington, D.C., Thursday morning, volunteers and clergy members from Connecticut to California placed more than 3,300 grave markers on the National Mall to create a makeshift cemetery in honor of every person killed as a result of gun violence since the December massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown.
The symbolic graveyard served as the site for a 24-hour vigil on Capitol Hill that began Thursday around 11 a.m. as the Senate met to vote on whether to begin a debate on gun control legislation. The vigil, organized by the PICO National Network’s Lifelines to Healing and Sojourners, brought together religious leaders from various faiths who all spoke about the need for common-sense gun laws.
“We can’t ever go back home again,” said Rev. Sam Saylor of Blackwell Memorial AME Zion Church in Hartford, Conn., to the crowd. Saylor’s son, Shane Oliver, was gunned down at the age of 20 last year. “Business in Washington can never be the same again. We can never take life for granted again.”









