Site Tools: Email Alerts | Text Alerts | iPhone/Android | Facebook | Twitter | RSS             Mobile, Alabama | Pensacola, Florida | Ft. Walton Beach, Florida
 

Memorial, Prayer Vigil Held on Campus for Gil Collar

Set Text Size SmallSet Text Size MediumSet Text Size LargeSet Text Size X-Large
Share
Updated: 10/12/2012 9:30 pm
(MOBILE, Ala.) A memorial for Gil Collar and a prayer vigil for his family was held Friday night on campus.

As a few people raised their voices and prayers to God, some cried. Others just held each other close without saying a word

"We've got an opportunity to draw on a strength that's beyond this world," said Pastor Jim Mather in prayer.

But everyone had Gil Collar's memory weighing heavily on their hearts.

"I mean it could have been any one of us and it's just hard, just thinking about his family," cried student Miranda Jahn.

Nearly fifty people held hands and bowed their heads in front of the bell tower at the University of South Alabama.

Inside the circle there was no judgement, no debates on how or why the tragedy occurred.

"I think there is a time and a place for that but right now I think the most productive thing we can do as a campus is to just pray and just remember Gil for who he was and keep his family and our campus and the police officers in our prayers," said Gil Collar's English Professor, Natalie Cochran-Murray, who organized the vigil and memorial.

Even people who didn't know Gil Collar, like pastor Jim Mather, took the time, to help those in grief.

"He became a part of this community for a brief period of time. We don't want people to google this story and think that what he did was just a big mistake, Gils' life didn't matter. No, Gil's life mattered," said Mather.

His life certainly mattered to this group. And even though he's no longer with us, he isn't forgotten.
Share
5 Comment(s)
Comments: Show | Hide

Here are the most recent story comments.View All

The views expressed here do not necessarily represent those of Local 15

flamekiller - 10/14/2012 5:39 PM
0 Votes
I think sbmom is on the right track, I don't think lectures are going to be the answer, and I'm not claiming to know myself. Perhaps some kind of scared strait interventions, these guys know all the drug use is wrong, but being young and with peer pressure, they feel young and invencible. I do know first hand the negative results this type behaviour produces and it's as grim as Gil found himself in. A true honor would be for lives to be saved from the lessons learned from this trajic event.

Mayhem Man - 10/13/2012 1:43 PM
2 Votes
Perhaps there should be a hunting season for crazed college kids on drugs, especially LSD. Seems that most of them are stoners and dopers and all they are doing is hanging out @ school on government funded student loans that they'll never pay back or being paid on for their entire adult lives if they make it past 30 years old from being doped up. Maybe a permit system like the alligator season, ran by the state and permits issued on a lottery type system where a law abiding gun owner citizen gets to participate and see how many stoners and dopers he or she can bag from September to May. Personally I am sick and tired of a America that has been overran by druggies and dopers that pollute the society that my children and grandchildren will have to grow up in and be around all this mess. Is it not enough for people to realize and understand that Mexican drug cartels are beheading and murdering men, women, and children each and everyday because they provide a poison that Americans seek and crave and the illegal drug business and smuggling is booming for these cartels? Stop the demand and the supply will go away!!!

Heimdal - 10/13/2012 5:05 AM
1 Vote
@sbmom ... @John S ... GET A GRIP ... Generations of college students and college-aged youngsters have experimented with recreational drugs for about 5 decades now, ever since the 60s when mandatory military service in debacles like the war in Vietnam caused so many to question the sanity of it all... No amount of preaching, however well-intended, to students in the classroom is going to change that... Any policeman worth serving the citizenry SHOULD BE aware of that FACT... Killing an unarmed college student, OBVIOUSLY under the influence of drugs, when non-lethal force is available is absolutely INEXCUSABLE, a lapse of judgment that demonstrates this 'officer' should never have been on a police force to begin with... To add insult to the parents of the victim injury, the entire matter is being sanitized by the politically correct media because the real crime committed was by a black police officer and the victim is white... A VERY enlightening article, shedding new light on the lack of judgment from 'Officer' Trevis Austin can be found at DailyMail... Navigate to ... DailyMail dot co dot uk ... and search on site for the article entitled ... Emotional tribute for Alabama student who had taken LSD and was shot dead as he chased campus police officer ... MANY pics there you won't see in the US main-stream-media.

John S - 10/12/2012 7:02 PM
3 Votes
I agree with sbmom. Also I do not understand why Local 15 News continues to make the point that the officer had a baton and pepper spray. Its almost as though they want to say that the student was within his rights to behave as he did, and the campus police did something wrong.

sbmom - 10/12/2012 6:14 PM
5 Votes
This is a good time for all university teachers/professors to teach classes on drugs dangers and side effects as well as personal choices, personal responsibility and consequences of our choices.mandatory classes every day for 3 days - that could reach most kids, then add questions on the enxt test about the dangers etc.
Inergize Digital This site is hosted and managed by Inergize Digital.
Mobile advertising for this site is available on Local Ad Buy.