The minister and the imam had known each other barely a year.
They had met at a vigil after the mass shooting at a Charleston, S.C., church in June 2015. They had encountered each other at rallies to protest gun violence and domestic violence, to memorialize a long-ago lynching, to counter a Ku Klux Klan rally, to remember victims of the Orlando attack.
â??Weâ??ve had to come together so many times because of tragedy and heartbreak,â? said the Rev. Michael Waters, pastor of the Joy Tabernacle A.M.E. Church.
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