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Hundreds mourn 3 children killed by carjacked SUV

Three small white caskets stood open at the front of the church, covered in flowers. One man doubled over in grief at the sight. Another sagged into the arms of relatives, who struggled to hold him up as he choked out two words: "My boy."

Two of three caskets leave the North Philadelphia Seventh-day Adventist Church for burial August 4, 2014, following funeral services for the three children killed last week in the North Philadelphia carjacking. ( TOM GRALISH / Staff Photographer )
Two of three caskets leave the North Philadelphia Seventh-day Adventist Church for burial August 4, 2014, following funeral services for the three children killed last week in the North Philadelphia carjacking. ( TOM GRALISH / Staff Photographer )Read more

Three small white caskets stood open at the front of the church, covered in flowers.

One man doubled over in grief at the sight. Another sagged into the arms of relatives, who struggled to hold him up as he choked out two words: "My boy."

Relatives and friends clung to each other as they made their way down the aisle at the North Philadelphia Seventh-day Adventist Church. One woman rushed down the aisle, crying, "It's not real."

As the bodies of three siblings lay in the white caskets on a bright Monday morning, hundreds filed past to pay their respects - politicians and pastors, teachers from Mary McLeod Bethune Elementary, and even a local motorcycle club, decked out in leather vests.

"There is nothing our hands can do to reverse the evil that has been done," said Elder William Taliaferro, addressing the congregation at the start of the service. He called on God to "help us recognize there is a day when the wicked will cease from troubling you."

Less than two weeks ago, the children - Keiearra Williams, 15; Joseph Reed, 10; and Terrance Moore, 7 - had been selling fruit to raise money for a church group on the corner of Allegheny and Germantown Avenues when a carjacked SUV jumped the curb and rammed into the fruit stand. The children were killed. Their mother was critically injured - so badly that she only opened her eyes Wednesday, and could not attend her children's funeral.

Her surviving daughters, Aeisha and Charmaine, sat surrounded by relatives instead, and placed a stuffed animal into each of their siblings' caskets as they were closed.

Keiearra, the "mother hen" of the five Williams siblings, was about to start high school and loved to read and draw, her family wrote in an obituary read at the service. Joseph - "Joe-Joe" to the family - "enjoyed riding his bike, and everyone else's." Terrance, they said, "was the precious baby boy."

"They were children with a bright future," the family wrote. "They were full of promise."

Speakers both religious and secular - including District Attorney Seth Williams and Rep. W. Curtis Thomas (D., Phila.) - talked of the children's commitment to their community, and their passion for a modest community garden on their North Philadelphia block.

Sonia Blount, who had helped organize the garden, gave the remaining Williams sisters a plant from the tiny plot of land they had spent hours tending.

"The work is not done," said Blount, founder of local nonprofit Youth For Change.

Amid their grief, the congregation sang, cheered, and clapped as speakers and family members paid tribute to the children.

Pastor Keith Goodman, in a rousing eulogy, urged the church to remember that "God's eyes were watching these children."

"These children who died in Christ are going to come up like he came up," he said.

The congregation rose to its feet, arms in the air.

"We are sad, but our sadness is infused with a degree of hope," he said in a booming voice.

In the front pews, the Williams family members hugged each other, clasped hands, and listened as he said, "The dead in Christ shall rise up!"

215-854-2961 @aubreyjwhelan