20th
Anniversary of Branch Davidian raid in Waco, Texas
20
April, 2013
WACO,
Texas -- On a grassy Texas prairie two decades ago, massive flames
engulfed a religious sect's compound where nearly 80 people --
including two dozen children -- had been holed up since a botched
federal raid seven weeks earlier.
Millions
watched live television coverage of the fiery end of the government's
standoff with Branch Davidian members, including sect leader David
Koresh, whom authorities had been trying to arrest on weapons
charges. Local hospitals prepared for burn victims, but only nine
people escaped.
"After
I jumped out, I could see the (burned) skin rolling off my hands,"
said Clive Doyle, who lost his 18-year-old daughter in the fire but
was able to escape after a military vehicle rammed a hole through the
building. "It was pure horror."
Emotional
wounds remain raw for survivors and those who left the compound
during the 51-day standoff, many who gathered for a memorial service
Friday -- exactly 20 years after the blaze. They still blame law
enforcement agencies for the deaths of their relatives and friends,
seeing the incident as an unwarranted government intrusion into
personal and religious freedoms.
Most
do not blame Koresh, and do not believe he held control over anyone.
Some
survivors remain in Central Texas, but only a few still follow
Koresh's teachings and attend a weekly Bible study led by Doyle.
Although some still believe Koresh was a prophet, others have turned
against religion or associate church with painful memories
.
"It
haunts me every day of my life," 29-year-old Heather Jones
Burson said after the memorial service, which was attended by about
75 people who included survivors and others who blame the government.
"To this day, I still don't understand why. There were so many
other ways to deal with it."
ATF
agents raided the compound about 10 miles outside Waco on Feb. 28,
1993, trying to arrest Koresh for stockpiling illegal weapons. But
the group 7/87/8-- an offshoot of the Seventh-day Adventists -- had
been tipped off about the raid, and a shootout ensued. Four agents
and six Davidians were killed that day, and a standoff ensued.
As
the weeks dragged on, federal authorities said they were becoming
increasingly worried about the Davidian children possibly being
abused. Koresh was known to have multiple "wives,"
including preteen girls. Then on April 19, 1993, after an FBI
negotiator shouted over a loudspeaker for Koresh to lead his people
out and "be a messiah, not a destroyer," military vehicles
began ramming the buildings and spraying tear gas inside. A few hours
later flames were seen spreading through the compound.
Authorities
claim the Davidians committed suicide by setting the fire and
shooting themselves. But survivors deny there was a suicide pact,
saying military vehicles knocked over lanterns and ignited the blaze.
Some independent experts have said FBI aircraft footage shows 57
flashes that indicate gunfire toward Davidians inside the compound or
on the roof that morning.
In
1994 in San Antonio, 11 Davidians went on trial; all were acquitted
of murder and conspiracy to commit murder charges. However, five were
convicted of voluntary manslaughter and weapons charges, and three
were convicted on weapons charges. A 12th Davidian pleaded guilty to
a lesser charge in exchange for testifying against the others; she
was sentenced to three years in prison and was released in 1996.
The
federal judge sentenced most to 40 years in prison, but in 2000
reduced most terms to 15 years after the U.S. Supreme Court
overturned his decision.
Paul
Fatta, who was released from custody in 2006 and now lives in San
Diego, told the group gathered Friday that he still considers himself
a Branch Davidian. Fatta, who was at a gun show in Austin the day of
the ATF raid but was convicted on weapons charges, said losing his
friends -- not serving prison time -- was the hardest part.
"My
suffering or what I went through is nothing compared to my friends
who were on the property, and the kids. They are the ones who really
suffered, and to live your life without your parents" is awful,
Fatta said, referring to the children who left the compound during
the standoff.
Burson,
whose father and grandfather died in the fire, was the last of the 21
children who left the compound during the standoff; 14 adults also
left. Burson, who got married on the 10th anniversary of the compound
fire so she would associate the date with a positive event, said she
cannot bear to go back to the site, where a wall of stones engraved
with each victim's names is at the property's entrance.
"It's
painful, so sad," she said, noting that she remembers riding
go-carts with friends on the compound and being riveted by Koresh's
lengthy sermons about the end of the world.
"It
makes me think of all of the memories, and now it's just gone."

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.