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Families of slain children receive support from broader community

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“I said pick two of your favorites and he picked them out and we lit a candle, said a prayer, and he started to cry a little while ago,” Neil-Griffith said. “And I said, ‘You’re doing a very good thing by donating stuffed animals. It’s a good gesture from your heart and, you know, now they’re with Uncle Calvin and they’re angels and, you know, you’re part of that.’ ”

Neil-Griffith’s 16-year-old, Noah, said it was scary because his brother is about the same age as the first-graders who died at Sandy Hook. Since the shooting, there has been discussion in his school on Long Island about safety procedures.

“I heard my principal is going to practice it after Christmas break,” Noah Griffith said.

Down the street from the memorial, Kathi Schapp of Torrington, Conn., tried to help by bringing her golden retriever to town. She and a friend brought their dogs that work as therapy dogs at hospitals, nursing homes and with children.

“Not in this capacity, you know. Who ever would have thought that we’d have something like this where we’d be needed,” Schapp said. “This community needs healing . . . . I felt this was something I could give to the community. You know, maybe get someone to smile that who hasn’t smiled since Friday.”

One of the first funerals to be held was Monday for Jack Pinto, a big fan of the New York Giants football team. On Tuesday, Giants receiver Victor Cruz visited the home of the 6-year-old who was buried in a replica Cruz jersey.

Several elementary school-age children played touch football in the front yard of his family's home Tuesday and many wore Giants jerseys or Newtown football or wrestling shirts as they laughed, smiled and hugged.

The children and their families left after several hours. Kids carried autographed Giants footballs and jerseys.

About 45 minutes later, Cruz left the home in an SUV and an escort of five police cruisers, sirens blaring. He later tweeted “much love to the entire Pinto family. Great people with huge hearts.”

In declaring Friday a “Day of Mourning,” Connecticut Gov. Dannel P. Malloy is calling for the state — and the nation — to come together to mourn lives with such promise having been cut short.

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