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Youngest of 10 Buffalo shooting victims laid to rest

A man wears a T-shirt with a girl's photograph on it before a funeral service.
Enrique Owens, a cousin of Roberta Drury, wears a T-shirt with her photograph before her funeral service Saturday in Syracuse, N.Y. Drury was one of 10 killed in the mass shooting in Buffalo.
(Lauren Petracca / Associated Press)
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Roberta Drury, a 32-year-old woman who was the youngest of the 10 Black people killed at a Buffalo, N.Y., supermarket, was remembered at her funeral Saturday for her love for family and friends, tenacity “and most of all, that smile that could light up a room.”

Robbie, as she was called by family and friends, grew up in the Syracuse area and moved to Buffalo a decade ago to help tend to her brother in his fight against leukemia. She was shot to death May 14 on a trip to buy groceries at the Tops Friendly Markets store, targeted by a white gunman, according to authorities.

“There are no words to fully express the depth and breadth of this tragedy,” Friar Nicholas Spano, parochial vicar of Assumption Church in Syracuse, said during the service. The stately brick church is not far from where Drury grew up in Cicero.

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“Last Saturday, May 14, our corner of the world was changed forever,” he said. “Lives ended. Dreams shattered, and our state was plunged into mourning.”

Drury’s family wrote in her obituary that she “couldn’t walk a few steps without meeting a new friend.”

“Robbie always made a big deal about someone when she saw them, always making sure they felt noticed and loved,” her sister, Amanda, told the Associated Press by text before the service.

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Russian troops continued their offensive into the Donbas region on Saturday, aiming to encircle the easternmost point of Ukrainian control.

After the funeral, at the Tops store in Buffalo, the mood was a mixture of tension and somber reflection as the city marked one week since the massacre, which authorities characterize as racially motivated.

At exactly 2:30 p.m., the moment the gunman opened fire, people who gathered and placed flowers near the corner where the victims have been memorialized observed a moment of silence. A dozen workers stood in a line outside of the Tops store entrance. Nearby, some mourners wept.

At the same time, Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown and other elected officials, along with Tops President John Persons, bowed their heads on the steps of City Hall for 123 seconds to mark the span of the attack. Houses of worship throughout the city were encouraged to ring their bells 13 times in honor of the 10 killed and three wounded.

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Joshua Kellick, a mental health and substance abuse counselor in Buffalo, said victim Geraldine Talley, 62, was a friend. She worked as a secretary in his office, but she was the glue that held their work family together, he said outside the store.

“She was nothing but loving and giving. She would go out of her way to help everybody. She was a mother, a grandmother to everybody, without actually being just that,” said Kellick, who gathered with several of Talley’s former co-workers to observe the moment of silence.

Jacob Blake Sr., the father of Jacob Blake Jr., a Black man paralyzed after being shot several times by police in Kenosha, Wis., in 2020, said he flew into town from the Chicago area to

offer support to the victims’ families. When his son was shot, Blake said, he needed a true outpouring of support.

“What I needed was somebody just holding my hand,” he said. “I just want the families to know that we’re here to give them what they need.”

As Drury was laid to rest, Spano said mourners would remember her “kindness ... love for family and friends, her perseverance, her

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tenacity, and most of all, that smile that could light up a room.”

“She was that light that shone through whatever darkness might have been present,” Spano said.

The family asked that donations be made to the Buffalo Zoo, a place Robbie Drury and her sister enjoyed walking through, Amanda Drury said.

Drury is the second shooting victim to be eulogized.

A private service was held Friday for Heyward Patterson, the beloved deacon at a church near the supermarket. More funerals were scheduled throughout the coming week.

A candlelight vigil was planned at the Buffalo supermarket in the evening.

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