Shoot me
first: Amish schoolgirl asked the killer
NICKEL MINES, Saturday (AP) - Under
a cold, steady drizzle, the Amish drove in horse and
buggy to a farmland cemetery Friday to bury the fifth
of five girls shot to death by an intruder as new details
emerged of heroism inside their schoolhouse.
Two of the survivors of the shooting
told their parents that 13-year-old Marian Fisher, one
of the slain girls, asked to be shot first, apparently
hoping the younger girls would be let go, according
to Leroy Zook, an Amish dairy farmer. His daughter,
Emma Mae Zook, was the teacher who ran from the schoolhouse
to a farm to summon police.
|
A horse-and-buggy Amish funeral
procession heads down Mine Road towards Bart Cemetery
after services for one of the Amish girls killed
Monday. AP. |
Amish builder David Lapp said Marian's
younger sister Barbie, who is recovering from gunshot
wounds, provided one of the accounts.
''Her sister remembers it, Barbie,''
Lapp said.
Trooper Linette Quinn said investigators
have not conducted any interview that confirms the story
but also said the investigation is incomplete.
Parents of two of the surviving victims
have also told Leroy Zook that the children questioned
Roberts after the adults left.
''They just asked him why he's doing
this. He said he's angry with God,'' Zook said.
On Friday, more than 40 buggies splashed
along country roads behind a funeral-home car, two mounted
state troopers and a carriage with the body of 12-year-old
Anna Mae Stoltzfus in a hand-sawn wooden coffin.
Four other girls killed during Monday's
shootings, two of them sisters, were laid to rest Thursday
at the same hilltop graveyard.
All roads into Nickel Mines village
were again blocked, and the funeral procession, like
those Thursday, passed the home of Charles Carl Roberts
IV, the 32-year-old milk truck driver who took the 10
girls, ages 6 to 13, hostage, tied them up and shot
them before killing himself.
One of the surviving girls was reported
to be in grave condition. The county coroner said he
had been told she was being taken off life support,
but her location was not known Friday. The four other
girls remain hospitalized.
Funerals for Fisher, 13, Naomi Rose
Ebersol, 7, and sisters Mary Liz Miller, 8, and Lena
Miller, 7, were held Thursday.
New details also emerged Friday about
the scene outside the schoolhouse.
Lapp, the builder, said he was told
there was a gunman at the school and arrived before
police, stopping a few hundred yards from the school.
''It was a feeling of helplessness,''
Lapp said.
He saw all the boys in the school
escape through a side door, jump a fence and then huddle
together in a meadow. Lapp watched police storm the
building and heard the gunfire.
''We just started shaking. There were
a couple of us by then,'' he said.
There were about 15 boys, ages 6 to
13, in the school.
''They're still in shock. ... They
have this glazed look in their eyes,'' woodworker Daniel
Esh, whose three grandnephews were in the school, said
earlier this week. ''They'll heal, but it will affect
them their whole lives.''
Just hours after the shootings, the
teacher vowed to return to her students. Though just
20, Emma Mae Zook had taught at the school for three
years.
''She said, 'Yeah, I need those children
now. I need them more than I ever did,''' Leroy Zook
said.
A former teacher at the school said
the funerals have been cathartic. Rebecca Petersheim,
29, of Georgetown, attended three funerals over the
last two days, one in a woodworking shop and the third
in a home.
''I just feel upheld by the prayers
of others,'' she said.
Despite their outward stoicism, the
families of the slain girls and the children who survived
the schoolhouse siege will endure the same deep grief
as would anyone outside their insular, 19th-century
world, experts said.
''(Outsiders) think these people don't
embrace each other, they don't cry. That's not true,''
said Jonas Beiler, a counselor who was raised Amish
and has visited with some of the victims' families this
week.
|