A woman cries outside of Hillcrest Memorial Funeral Home in Uvalde, Texas, on May 30, 2022, during the visitation for Amerie Jo Garza, who died in the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School. (Photo by CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images) UVALDE, Texas - It should have been the first day of a joyous week for Robb Elementary School students — the start of summer break.
Instead, the first two of 19 children slain inside a classroom were being remembered at funeral visitations.The gathering for 10-year-old Amerie Jo Garza was at Hillcrest Memorial Funeral Home on Monday in Uvalde, Texas, directly across from the grade school where the children, along with two teachers, were shot to death last week before the gunman himself was killed.
Visitation for another 10-year-old, Maite Rodriguez, was at the town's other funeral home.Over the next two-and-a-half traumatic weeks, people in the southwestern Texas town will say goodbye to the children and their teachers, one heart-wrenching visitation, funeral and burial after another.
As family and friends unleash their grief, investigators will push for answers about how police responded to the May 24 shooting, and lawmakers have said they'll consider what can be done to stem the gun violence permeating the nation.This week alone, funerals are planned for 11 children and teacher Irma Garcia.RELATED: Justice Department to investigate police response to Uvalde school shootingOn Monday, some mourners at Amerie’s visitation wore lilac or lavender shades of purple — Amerie’s favorites — at the request of her father, Angel Garza.