Following the June 2015 shootings at Emanuel AME Church in downtown Charleston, people around the world responded by banding together and offering support. Some attended vigils for the slain, others held hands and sang and cried, and yet others gave to Emanuel AME Church and the families of the victims, donating money, placing flowers and creating memorials in front of the church on Calhoun Street.
The outpouring of support was so great, in fact, that the largesse has posed a logistical problem: How do church and civic leaders best process so many gifts?
On Wednesday, Nov. 11, 2015, the College of Charleston will host “Keeping the Faith: Preservation and Documentation of Mother Emanuel,” a panel discussion focusing on the management-related issues involved in the responses to the Mother Emanuel AME tragedy. Topics to be discussed will include the administration and management of funds and memorabilia — how the physical gifts, artwork and other items left by visitors at the church are being preserved and archived, policies related to acquiring material donations, volunteer management, and managing the contributions that come into the City of Charleston’s Emanuel AME Fund.
The discussion will begin at 7 p.m. in the Recital Hall at the Simons Center for the Arts, 54 St. Philip St. The event will be hosted by Karen Chandler, director and associate professor in the College’s Arts Management Program.
- Elizabeth Alston – historian, Emanuel AME Church
- Stephen Bedard – director of finance, City of Charleston, adjunct professor, arts management and MPA Program, College of Charleston
- Georgette Mayo – processing archivist, Avery Research Center, College of Charleston
- Virginia Ellison – archivist, South Carolina Historical Society
- Celeste Wiley – visual material archivist, South Carolina Historical Society
- Meg Moughan – records manager, City of Charleston
One of the arts management program’s recent graduates, Tyler Boone ’14 who wrote “Next Life,” a song dedicated to the victims & families of the AME church shooting and produced by Matt Zutell ’13 of Coast Records, will perform the single and other songs as part of the event.
View a flyer for the panel discussion.
Watch the The “No Violence – No Victims Candlelight Vigil” held at the College on Sept. 29, 2015, to honor the victims of the Emanuel AME Church attack.