On this Mother’s Day, three Louisiana mothers grieve the deaths of eight of their children, seven killed by their own father

CNN

On this Mother’s Day, three Louisiana mothers grieve the deaths of eight of their children, seven killed by their own father

Alaa Elassar, CNN
12 min read

Shaneiqua Pugh, who lost all four of her children, holds a rose during the burial of the eight children who were killed during a mass shooting last month, on Saturday, at Forest Park Cemetery West in Shreveport, Louisiana. - Gerald Herbert/AP
Shaneiqua Pugh, who lost all four of her children, holds a rose during the burial of the eight children who were killed during a mass shooting last month, on Saturday, at Forest Park Cemetery West in Shreveport, Louisiana. – Gerald Herbert/AP

Christina Snow bends down and whispers something in her daughter’s ear as the 11-year-old lies in a white casket, eyes closed as if she were simply asleep.

On the morning before Mother’s Day, Sariahh Snow’s small, lifeless body is one of eight – all children – lined in open white caskets along the front of a church hall in Shreveport, Louisiana.

Except for the low murmur of church organ music drifting through the sanctuary, Snow’s muffled sobs momentarily silence an audience of hundreds who have gathered to grieve alongside the three mothers whose children were all fatally shot by the same man: the father of seven of the eight killed and an uncle to the eighth.

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The shocking act of violence, which also left two of the mothers seriously wounded, marked the nation’s deadliest mass shooting in more than two years, a catastrophe so staggering it forced an already grief-stricken country to once again confront the deadly collision of a mental health crisis and America’s unrelenting access to guns.

“This is not a Shreveport mourning,” Congressman Cleo Fields said in his tribute. “This is a nation mourning.”

Now remembered as the “Eternal 8,” Jayla Elkins, 3; Shayla Elkins, 5; Kayla Pugh, 6; Layla Pugh, 7; Mar’Kaydon Pugh, 10; Sariahh Snow, 11; Khedarrion Snow, 6; and Braylon Snow, 5, were killed in the April 19 shooting.

As grieving attendees lined up to pay respects to the children, one woman shut her eyes after peering at one of the children, Kayla, who wore a white dress, her fingernails carefully painted pink. Just behind her body stood a photograph from when she was still alive, her sweet, wide eyes impossible to reconcile with the stillness of the tiny body in the casket.

Mourners walk by caskets for the eight children who were killed during the mass shooting during funeral services for the children at the Summer Grove Baptist Church in Shreveport, Louisiana. - Gerald Herbert/AP
Mourners walk by caskets for the eight children who were killed during the mass shooting during funeral services for the children at the Summer Grove Baptist Church in Shreveport, Louisiana. – Gerald Herbert/AP
A man is comforted during funeral services as gospel music plays and prayers are spoken over the children. - Gerald Herbert/AP
A man is comforted during funeral services as gospel music plays and prayers are spoken over the children. – Gerald Herbert/AP

Inside the funeral pamphlet, Kayla is described by her family as “K-Mae,” a sweetheart with a big smile who never asked for much, but when she did, melted hearts. She loved “going to school, playing with her sisters, brothers, and cousins, and being outside running, jumping and even wrestling with those she loved.”

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The seven other entries read as sweetly. Sarriah was described as “sunshine,” a creative, smart, and loving girl. Khedarrion loved helping his family and adored his principal. Braylon was sweet and gentle. Mar’Kaydon, or “K-Bug,” was a cheerful child who loved telling his grandmother what he learned at school every day. Jayla, also known as her family’s “little J-Bae,” taught her family “more about unconditional love, strength and resilience than words could ever express.” Shayla was warm and quiet. Layla adored her siblings and cousins so much she “would stand up for them no matter how big the other person was.”

It’s a tragedy that sends chills racing down your spine and leaves a lump in your throat. Throughout the hall, people clung tightly to one another, wiping away each other’s tears. Children filled the pews — sweet, innocent and suddenly feeling even more precious to everyone there.

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