Southport chooses hope over hatred as it tries to heal
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A love of Taylor Swift and dancing brought three young girls together at a Southport studio for a holiday club on 29 July.
Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, Bebe King, six, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, had hoped to sing and dance but instead their young lives were cut short when an attacker entered the class with a knife.
A month on from the stabbing attack, which left 10 others seriously injured, the Merseyside town is trying to rebuild itself with a community group citing âa thousand acts of kindnessâ which have followed.
Floral tributes and teddies are still being left outside the Atkinson theatre as the Southport community unites in its grief.
Helen Marshall, 71, is one of the Lord Street in Bloom garden volunteers who have been looking after the floral tributes.
She said she âneededâ to do it, in a way to âhelp ease the painâ.
âIt does help when you are doing something, it helps your spirit because itâs such an awful thing,â she said.
âI think thereâs still a lot of pain but this is a town that is pulling together.â
The townâs residents have been left devastated as funerals for each of the girls have taken place, with crowds lining the streets to show their support.
Andrew Brown, who runs the Stand Up For Southport community group, said: âOne horrific act has been followed by a thousand acts of kindness.
âIt is a small town with a huge heart.â
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The community has come together for vigils to remember the victims and a bubble blowing event, to help children âblow kisses to heavenâ .
The townâs youth theatre performed Songs For Southport, which aimed to âmake people feel there is hope and happinessâ.
Deborah Bloom, co-director, said healing from the attack would âbe a long and difficult processâ.
âIâm not sure the town will ever be able to recover from this,â she said.
âOur children have been made to feel unsafe and it has shaken the whole communityâ.
She said the concert had given people âthe ability to find a glimmer of light in what seems like eternal darknessâ.
Other people in the town have found different ways to show their support in the weeks that followed.
A knitting group paid tribute with a post box top showing the girls as three angels and charity football matches and many fundraising events have been held for those affected.
Just a day after the knife attack, Southport residents were forced to pull together when the townâs mosque on St Lukeâs Road, was targeted by rioters.
The disorder followed misinformation being spread online about the stabbing attack suspect.
Locals stepped up immediately to clear out the debris and rebuild a wall.
Ibrahim Hussein, Imam and chairman of Southport Mosque, said he felt a month on the community spirit in the town was âeven more supportive than beforeâ.
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âThere are a lot of people stopping us, asking us if we need help, offering their support, it is wonderful,â he said.
âI think Southport is getting closer and much happier by rejecting the hatred.â
King Charles expressed his âsympathy and empathyâ for the people of Southport when he travelled to the town, with Ms Marshall saying the royal visit helped âboost moraleâ when âwe needed something to lift the awful moodâ.
When the stabbings took place it was the beginning of the summer holidays but next week children in the town will be returning to the classroom, some without their classmates.
Patrick Hurley, MP for Southport, hopes the townâs âSchoolâs First approachâ will help the children, with support from educational psychology teams and mental health professionals being offered.
âIt is a very small neighbourhood, in the town thereâs only about 70,000 people and everybody knows somebody who has been affected,â the Labour MP said.
âWe need to make sure that across the medium and longer term there is a package of support thereâ.
Mr Hurley said he wanted to find âa way of remembering the girls which is a celebration of their livesâ.
He said he was keen for there to be a permanent memorial and an annual community-led celebration was also being looked at for the years to come.
âNobody in the town wants the town to be known for what happened in July,â he added.
âFor the people who live here, the townâs best days lie ahead of itâ.
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However, some businesses in the town fear visitors had been put off coming to the seaside resort this summer.
Norman Wallis, owner of Southport Pleasureland, said the stabbing attack had created âa frenzy of worryâ.
âLord Street has been empty and many businesses are struggling to survive,â he said.
Mr Wallis, who is organising a fundraiser in the town on 1 September, hopes the council will prioritise funding to attract visitors back to the town.
âStronger togetherâ
Sefton Council said there was a recovery fund set up for businesses located in the Hart Street and St Lukeâs Road areas.
However, Mike Sammon, councillor for the Cambridge ward in Southport, said he had âheard the oppositeâ, that people had been drawn to the town after âseeing what a great community Southport isâ.
Mr Brown agreed there was a lot to look forward to in the town.
âWe are stronger together,â he added.
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