Newtown families, religious leaders join vigil in Washington, D.C. - Action News
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Newtown families, religious leaders join vigil in Washington, D.C.

Members of the Newtown, Conn., community, including the parent of a teacher killed in a school massacre last year, are joining a vigil at the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C., to remember those killed by gun violence.

Shooting at Sandy Hook school a year ago claimed 20 students and six teachers

Ginny Simmons takes part in a National Vigil for Victims of Gun Violence just prior to the first anniversary marking the Sandy Hook Elementary School mass shooting at Washington National Cathedral on Thursday. (Matt McClain, The Washington Post/Associated Press)

Members of the Newtown, Conn., community, including the parent of a teacher killed in a school massacre a year ago, gathered at the National Cathedral Thursday for a vigil to remember those who lost their lives because of gun violence.

Gilles Rousseau of Southbury, Conn., was among those who spoke. His daughter, Lauren Rousseau, had just become a full-time teacher last year at Sandy Hook Elementary School. She read to her students as a gunman invaded the school, trying to calm them, before she was killed.

"We are here today with the common goal of remembering our loved ones and seeking to make the world a safer place," Rousseau said.

Rousseau joined family members who lost loved ones to gun violence in the Aurora, Colo., theatreshooting, in Chicago street violence and in a San Diego restaurant shooting.

The cathedral has advocated for gun control after the school shooting. Cathedral dean The Very Rev. Gary Hall has said the "gun lobby is no match for the cross lobby."

Family members of gun violence embrace each other Thursday at a vigil for victims of the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., and other victims of gun violence, (Charles Dharapak/Associated Press)

Hall said 32,000 more people have been killed by gun violence since the Newtown shooting last Dec. 14.

The Rev. Mel Kawakami of Newtown United Methodist Church noted that there have been other school shootings since Sandy Hook.

"We gather to say, `No more,"' he said.

Other gun control advocates spoke about their personal connections to gun violence and why they believe there should be more control over access to weapons.