Saved by the Blood
04/23/07 08:53 PM
I just received an amazing email from someone in our
Christ's Church family. Some background before you
read it. Gil is a member of Grace Covenant Church in
Harrisonburg. He's 38, married and has a young
toddler. He is finishing up his engineering degree at
Virginia Tech. This account was written by a close
friend of Gil's from Grace Covenant Church.
“Saved by the
blood”
This means different things to people.
We sometimes say that we were “saved by the blood of
Jesus” when he died on the cross
It was about 9pm on April 16th, and Gil, Nell-Marie,
Ellen and myself were in the hospital room in
Roanoke. Gil said, “Can I have a tissue…there’s blood
inside my nose.” We got him one, and as he cleaned
the dried blood from inside his nose he said…”It’s
not my blood…it’s from the guy who was on top of
me….his blood was everywhere…on my face, in my eyes,
my nose, my mouth…it was all over.” He said
that the reason he was not killed must have been “all
that blood” that covered him. “He must have thought
that I was already dead”. It was the blood of
the student who had been seated behind Gil when it
all started.
I thought about Godfrey Birtle, a British singer we
know, who wrote and sings a tremendous song titled,
“If it wasn’t for the blood, I’d be dead!’ The
recovering heroin addicts at Betel, in Birmingham, UK
where our church goes and ministers to the guys and
women who are living new lives in Christ know this
song well! All of the residents there at Betel
have overcome the odds of addiction and death…they
exclaim, “If it wasn’t for the blood, I’d be dead!”
And, they sing it with such passion…it’s difficult
for us to recognize just how literally, they mean
those words!
Almost 12 hours to the minute before Gil asked for
the tissue that night, the carnage began. It was
Monday morning, April 16th, about 9:20 am, when Gil,
the Professor, and 13 other graduate students were
interrupted, (the class began at 9am) by someone who
opened the wooden door to the classroom (a smaller
room about 20’ by 30’ in size) and took up a
“shooters” stance at the front of the room and began
firing his semi-automatic 9mm pistol directly at
students on the front row. He moved from his left to
his right. Gil sat on the last chair in the front
row, on the shooter’s right.
Gil dove for the floor, at the side wall of the room,
by a radiator. (This building was built in the
1950’s) He felt the student next to him dive for
cover in the same way landing on top of him. Not
fully covering Gil, but “scissored” across his body.
The shooter emptied the first 15 round clip and
ejected it, and inserted another one. He moved about
the room shooting. Gil felt a bullet strike the guy
on top of him…then he felt some searing pain in his
neck. He later speculated that the bullet went
through the body of the person on top of him, before
it entered his mastoid bone just behind and below his
left ear. The surgeon later indicated that he thought
it was a direct shot.
Then the shooter left the room, and they heard shots
being fired nearby. Lots of gunshots. Gil motioned a
student nearby to get his phone out of his book
bag and call 911. The guy retrieved Gil’s phone and
dialed and told the police what was happening. It is
about 9:25 or so.
Gil told us that, “I don’t recall having fear…I only
recall praying and thinking about my wife and my
son”.
Gil and a couple of others strategized, that the best
thing to do was to remain in the positions they were
in and “play dead” because the shooter was right
outside the door and might very well return…so,
that’s what they did. Gil was underneath the bleeding
student from Indonesia. No talking, nothing was heard
from him.
Just when they thought the terror might have
ended…the shooter comes back in the room! Where are
the police, Gil thought…why aren’t they here
protecting us? The South Korean student, (23
years old) came back firing at people strewn about
the room. 10 shots, or more. Gil recounted that at
one point, the shooter was standing right beside
where he was lying underneath the Indonesian and felt
3 or 4 more bullets impacting into the body above
him. “Thump, thump, thump”…but none seemed to
hit Gil…
Then the shooter left and shot some more outside
(actually across the hall in another classroom) Then
SILENCE. Finally, no more shooting.
They remained in position for a time and gradually,
when the police came, they got up…but only two of the
14 people got up. Only two of them, Gil and his
friend named Nathaniel could walk out. Lee,
another student was later seen safely outside. The
others were either deceased already or badly wounded.
At this writing, 11am on the 17th, Gil still doesn’t
have a definitive listing of who might have survived.
The Professor was killed.
The shooter shot himself before the police could
engage him.
It’s about 9:50 am, by this time, and the police lead
Nathaniel, and then Gil, down and out of the
building, and into a brown Explorer. They were
taken to “triage” there on campus along with the
other injured students.
Nell-Marie called me at about 10:15 and gave me the
unbelievable news. I was watching the report on TV
when she called. She was calling to tell us that Gil
was ok and not involved, right? Of course…but no,
that’s not what Nell-Marie said. “Gil’s alright”, she
said, but, “he was right in the middle of it…it was
in his classroom.” She had spoken to Gil only minutes
before. “But, he’s ok!”
I hung up and dialed Gil’s cell phone. He answered,
“Hi, Billy”, seeing my caller ID light up. He sounded
quite normal. I was relieved. There was noise in the
background, but I could hear him clearly…he said
that, “I don’t think I was shot, but a bullet grazed
my arm and my neck”. I’m ok. (actually, the bullet
grazed his back and entered the base of his skull, we
were to find out…the bullet was still lodged against
his mastoid bone in there as we spoke.) So I knew at
the outset that he was in the classroom where
shooting happened, but nothing else…no more details,
until later…then our connection went bad…I redialed
and began talking again…Gil said something…”It
was...he….shot…” and then he couldn’t speak…he was
unable to get out anything but sobs..I pictured him
there with the phone in his hand, trying to imagine
what he must have been feeling….”I’ll be there in two
hours!” I said…”I’ll find Nell-Marie and I’ll
see you by one o’clock.” He said, “Ok”, and we
hung up.
Nell-Marie learned that they had taken Gil to the
Lewis Gale Hospital in Roanoke, by ambulance, along
with a Professor, from the triage area on campus. It
was too windy for helicopters to fly.
I arrived about 1:30, and found Nell-Marie in the
emergency room waiting room. She had not yet seen
Gil.
Momentarily, someone came out to identify us, and
Nell-Marie got connected. They took her back to Gil.
20 minutes later, a nurse came out to say that Gil
was being X-rayed at that time because there was a
bullet still in his head! What? But she assured us
that it was not in a dangerous place neurologically
and that they might even leave it in there…of course,
they took Gil into surgery about 2:30 and removed the
bullet..a 9mm slug, in tact and placed a drain in the
wound. So by 5:30, Gil was in recovery and wide
awake. By 5:40 pm, he was wheeled into room 526,
where we got to see him for the first time. He looked
ashen, washed out, serious and tired, but remarkably
good. He was alert and fully aware of everything.
Then he talked and talked, freely giving us every
detail. That’s where we learned that he was “saved by
the blood” of the Indonesian student.
I suggested to Gil that if I were the Dad in
Indonesia and found out that my beloved son was
killed in this way…I would have so many unanswered
questions…I would feel so helpless. I would be
comforted to know, perhaps, that you (Gil) survived
because of my son’s blood…that my son’s death in some
way “saved” or shielded you from that fate. Gil
agreed. And, perhaps he will someday get the chance
to give his story to the parents from Indonesia.