EAllusion wrote:Remember the the story that developed out of the Columbine shootings that a student was asked if she believed in God under threat of her life, she said yes, and then was murdered? Almost right away it was clear that this was a myth, but it the story held and for some people continues to hold tremendous power in evangelical circles precisely because it plays into this fantasy.
I wouldn't call it a myth; that implies that it was entirely fabricated, which it wasn't. Rather, it was an amalgamation of two different shootings in the library that did happen. A girl in the Columbine library was asked if she believed in God, and she said yes. But the girl that it happened to---Valeen Schnurr---survived her injuries, and she was shot before she was asked whether she believed in God, not after.
A few years ago, Valeen told
The Guardian:
Across the room, Valeen Schnurr, who had turned 18 six days before, was cowering beneath another table with her best friend Lauren. They had just been preparing an English presentation on the American Civil War novel Cold Mountain and their pencil cases were still on the desk above their heads. Valeen remembers Lauren holding her hand tightly. Then, without understanding why, Valeen felt her body jerk forcefully. She noticed she was bleeding and would find out subsequently that she had been shot nine times at close range. "The force of the bullets pushed me out from under the table," says Valeen, now 27. "I was in excruciating pain. It feels like fire running through your body. I was saying 'Oh my God, oh my God' and one of them [Klebold] asked me if I believed in God. I said yes. He asked why. I said 'My parents brought me up that way'."
Then she held her breath and closed her eyes, hoping he would leave her to die. The gunman walked away.
Cassie Bernall, who was also in the library, was shot and killed. The Schnurr and Bernall accounts got mangled together. Perhaps it was innocent at first (that would be understandable), but I think Christians continued to promote the "she said yes!" martyrdom of Cassie Bernall long after they knew the details were not accurate.
It was also claimed that the first victim of Harris and Klebold, Rachel Scott, was asked if she believed in God, said yes, and was fatally shot afterward. I heard Scott's father speak some number of years ago. He said that the source for that was Rachel's friend Richard Castaldo, who was shot 8 times himself and paralyzed by the gunmen, but that Castaldo had since backed off from that and denied that Rachel had been asked about God prior to being shot. Darrell Scott was very candid in admitting that while he personally believed it had happened, it was possible that it hadn't and it was not central to the message that he wanted to share about Rachel.
Personally, I think Schnurr was the only person who was asked that day about her belief in God, and she was not shot because of it.