Protesters chanted “Black lives matter” and “We can’t take it no more.” At the end of the event, the demonstrators hung banners with the names of those killed on the Daughters of the Confederacy building.
They also held signs that read, “Still We Rise” and “Stop White Terrorism”.
Reverend Waltrina Middleton, a cousin of the slain Reverend Middleton-Doctor, was among the protesters.
“My ancestors were trotted through this market, their bodies on the ground of this Meeting Street, this marketplace. To know the trail of blood flows from here, it flows straight to Mother Emmanuel, it breaks my heart,” she said, as quoted by AP.
Congregation member Harold Washington spoke about how the massacre site was treated.
“They did a good job cleaning it up. There were a few bullet holes around, but ... they cut them out so you don’t see the actual holes,” he said.
Also, he expects the first post-shooting service at the church to be very emotional: “I think it’s gonna be a touching moment – a lot of crying, hugging.”
A huge crowd, reportedly nearly a mile in length during the march, later rallied against the presence of the Confederate flag – viewed by some as symbol of white supremacy and slavery – on the premises of the South Carolina Statehouse.