Vigil held for woman shot, gravely wounded while driving in south Minneapolis

More than 100 people gathered on a south Minneapolis street corner to share their memories of Arionna Buckanaga.

May 7, 2020 at 9:31PM
Arionna Buckinaga, pictured with her young son.
Arionna Buckinaga, pictured with her young son. (Marci Schmitt/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

As evening approached Wednesday, dozens of Arionna Buckanaga's relatives and friends gathered on a south Minneapolis street corner, playing drums and chanting prayers for the 18-year-old gravely wounded in a shooting earlier this week.

Buckanaga was shot late Monday when someone fired into the car she and a male companion were driving in on Cedar Avenue, causing the car to veer off the road and slam into a tree near 39th Street.

The male companion, who police suspect was the intended the target of the attack, wasn't injured.

Members of the department's crisis response team said they were told by the family that Buckanaga was on life support and had no brain function.

No arrests had been announced as of Wednesday. Police haven't offered a description of the suspect vehicle, nor said whether the shooting was related to any other recent gunfire incidents in the area.

At Wednesday's vigil, speaker after speaker shared memories of Buckanaga, the mother of a young son, often referring to her by her nickname, "Ari." Heads nodded when V.J. Smith, of the violence prevention group MAD DADS, called on the men in the crowd to stop the violence and "protect our sisters."

A group of men sat in a circle, thumping on a calfskin drum and singing — "to help her on her journey," as one man explained. In between songs, they invited people to sprinkle tobacco on the drum as a blessing.

As they played, a little girl walked through the crowd with a bowl of burning incense, as people leaned over and waved the swirling smoke over their bodies. Some wore face masks.

One of Buckanaga's aunts, Rebecca, also spoke at the vigil, thanking the crowd of more than 100 for coming and asking for their continued support of her family.

"This is really hard for them and they have a long road ahead of them so they really, really need your prayers," she said, adding the Ojibwe word for thank you: "Miigwetch."

Another aunt, Jana Williams, said that if Buckanaga died, it wouldn't be in vain, as her relatives had decided to donate her organs.

"We may see her eyes looking back at us," Williams said. "We may see her heart."

Friends and relatives gathered to pray, chant and share stories of Arionna Buckanaga, who was gravely injured in a south Minneapolis shooting this week.
Friends and relatives gathered to pray, chant and share stories of Arionna Buckanaga, who was gravely injured in a south Minneapolis shooting this week. (Marci Schmitt — Star Tribune/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
about the writer

about the writer

Libor Jany

Reporter

Libor Jany is the Minneapolis crime reporter for the Star Tribune. He joined the newspaper in 2013, after stints in newsrooms in Connecticut, New Jersey, California and Mississippi. He spent his first year working out of the paper's Washington County bureau, focusing on transportation and education issues, before moving to the Dakota County team.

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