Giffords, Tucson mark one-year anniversary of shooting rampage


Giffords, Tucson mark one-year anniversary of shooting rampage

Associated Press

TUCSON, Ariz.

Bells rang out across Tucson on Sunday to mark exactly one year since a bloody morning when a gunman’s deadly rampage shook a community and shocked a nation.

It’s been a year of reflecting on lives shattered, of struggling with flashbacks and nightmares, of replaying the what-ifs before the deadly rampage. And in the middle of it: one woman, Gabrielle Giffords, forging one of the most grueling journeys back of all.

One year after a deranged gunman shot the Arizona congresswoman in the head and opened fire on dozens of others at a Tucson grocery store, the congresswoman and other survivors were gathering Sunday to reflect and move forward.

Many throughout the close-knit southern Arizona community began the day of remembrance Sunday by ringing bells at 10:11 a.m., the exact time the gunman shot Giffords and methodically moved down a line of people waiting to talk to her during a congressional meet-and-greet on Jan. 8, 2011.

Six people were killed, including a 9-year-old girl born on 9/11 and a federal judge. Thirteen others were shot, including Giffords.

Gail Gardiner, 70, who lives about a mile away from Safeway where the shooting happened, came to the store Sunday along with about 30 others and tied a balloon with butterflies on it that says “Thinking of you” to a railing outside the store, next to a shooting memorial.

“This is my backyard and this is where I want to be and show people that we remember this,” Gardiner said. “It just hits so close to home and so many innocent people’s lives were taken and changed forever.”

People hugged each other and cried as the time of the shooting passed. Many bowed their heads in prayer.

The 41-year-old Giffords has spent the last year in Houston undergoing intensive physical and speech therapy. Doctors and family have called her recovery miraculous after the Jan. 8 shooting; she is able to walk and talk, vote in Congress and gave a televised interview to ABC’s Diane Sawyer in May. But doctors have said it would take many months to determine the lasting effects of her brain injury. The three-term congresswoman has four months to decide whether to seek re-election.