UVALDE 鈥 South Texans packed into the Uvalde County Fairplex on Wednesday and formed a sea of maroon 鈥 the town鈥檚 school color.
Just southwest of downtown Uvalde, around 1,000 community members filed into the multipurpose stadium. It鈥檚 been used for county rodeos, monster truck rallies and gun shows. On Wednesday night, attendees bowed their heads to pray.
鈥淲e love our community, we love our colors, maroon,鈥 said Carlos Contreras, a minister at Primera Iglesia Bautista, or First Baptist Church in Spanish. He grew up in Uvalde and attended Robb Elementary School, where a gunman killed 21 people on Tuesday. 鈥淲e may not understand what happened here yesterday, but we seek the Lord, as best we can.鈥
In English and Spanish, pastors from different churches in Uvalde asked the community to unite in prayer.
鈥淚 want you to know that we love you,鈥 said Tony Gruben, a pastor at Uvalde鈥檚 Baptist Temple Church, told those present. 鈥淭he ministers of this community, people of this community, we love each other.鈥
In crowded bleachers packed with young children and families, community members bowed their heads, outstretched their arms and asked for healing.
Later, after the vigil concluded, residents embraced their friends and neighbors. Some rode home together. High school students piled into cars or the back of pickup trucks. Some families stuck around, grieving together in small groups.
Maricela Sanchez, 33, had dinner with a friend at the food trucks that had set up outside the Fairplex. Their young children played around them as they sat and spoke at a picnic table, processing the trauma to the community.
鈥淲e were all strong for El Paso,鈥 said Sanchez, a mother of three children who attended the vigil, referring to the mass shooting at an El Paso Walmart in 2019. 鈥淏ut now that we鈥檙e going through it, we鈥檙e really not that strong right now. We鈥檙e trying to be. I want to be strong.鈥
鈥淚 really do appreciate people praying,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e are happy they鈥檙e thinking about us because we thought about them.鈥
At the end of the vigil, before families left, a violinist took the stage. He began to play and Uvalde County residents swayed to 鈥淎mazing Grace.鈥 Some mouthed the words: 鈥淚 once was lost but now am found.鈥
鈥淲e鈥檙e gonna get through this, but it鈥檚 not going to be easy,鈥 said Contreras, the minister at Primera Iglesia Bautista. 鈥淲e have all been affected by it. We all know each other. It鈥檚 gonna take some time.鈥