Utvika, Norway:
Survivors of a massacre which claimed the lives of 69 people in Norway last month carried flowers to the site of the killings on Saturday, laughter blending with tears as they remembered the joys of an island youth camp that turned into a scene of horror.
Stine Renate Haaheim, who survived the shooting spree on Utoya Island, said her feelings ranged from emptiness and extreme grief to joy when she returned to the place she had visited each summer for more than 10 years before the July 22 massacre.
"There was an extreme mix of feelings because it was very difficult and we are still in grief, but at the same time I was looking forward to seeing Utoya. I was hoping that in some kind of way it will still be the same island as it used to be," the 27-year-old lawmaker said after returning from Utoya. "For me it was really important, I wanted to go back as soon as possible."
The hardest part, she said, was seeing where her friends died.
"We started going around to all the places where our friends were killed and just taking a minute of silence and trying to remember all the good times we had with them and that was extremely hard, I think it's not possible to explain the feelings," Haaheim said, fighting back tears.
Many who returned to the island lit candles and laid handwritten notes in memory of their friends at the sites where they were shot during the summer camp organized by the youth wing of Norway's Labour Party. They also gathered to sing, just like they used to do on Utoya.
Eskil Pedersen, the leader of the party's youth organization, said his visit to the island with Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg and several hundred youth politicians had been "heavy, but fine."
"It was incredibly good to see them (the survivors) smiling again on Utoya," Pedersen told reporters.
Up to 1,000 survivors and relatives travelled to Utoya on Saturday, accompanied by police and medical staff, to face the painful memories of the shooting spree by a right-wing extremist. Their visit followed a similar arrangement on Friday, when around 500 relatives of the deceased came to see the sites where they lost their loved ones.
Stoltenberg - the leader of the Norwegian Labor Party - said he had wanted to visit "to take part in their mourning and be there for them."
Anders Behring Breivik has admitted killing 77 people on July 22 when he first detonated a truck bomb outside government offices in the capital, Oslo, and then went on a meticulously planned shooting spree on the island, some 25 miles (40 kilometres) away.
The right-wing extremist denies criminal guilt because he believes the massacre was necessary to save Norway and to punish politicians that have embraced multiculturalism.
Haaheim, who escaped Breivik's bullets by hiding near the shore and swimming to a boat, on Saturday, revisited the places where she had been on the day of the attack.
"I met up with the boys I was with, we walked together where we ran last time, and we tried to remember what it was like and what we said to each other," she said. "We spoke about what we had been doing - we actually told some jokes when we were hiding, because we were afraid of people panicking."
On that fateful day, Haaheim said she was inside a building when she saw people panicking and running around outside, so she decided to escape.
Haaheim said she and others found a hiding place near the shore, where they lay low until they heard the sound of bullets getting louder and discovered that a man who was dressed as a policeman was shooting at their friends. They then swam for their lives.
"He actually walked right over our heads," she said. "People were screaming 'the police are here, we are now safe' and then I remember me and my friend we just hugged each other and were extremely happy for maybe a half a second and then I saw him shooting people."
Haaheim said she remembers feelings of fear, chaos and being out of control extremely well, but sometimes feels like she is just describing a "crazy movie."
But, despite the sadness and grief, she said she doesn't feel any hatred.
"We have met bullets with flowers and showed that love is much ... stronger than hate, and speaking for myself revenge is not in my thoughts," Haaheim said. "I want to use my thoughts and my efforts on loving those who are still alive and remembering those who are not with us anymore."
Media were not allowed access to the heavily guarded island where Breivik spent 90 minutes executing the 69 people. Many of the victims were shot in the water as they tried to escape by swimming.
Norway's General Director of Health Bjoern Inge Larsen said he hoped the visits would help survivors and families of the victims come to grips with the deaths.
"The people going there today ... have a lot of anxiety," Larsen said. "They were life-threatened on this island four weeks ago in a very traumatizing manner, so what we are prepared for is to help them to overcome that anxiety."
The operation included 400 health care workers, psychiatrists, police and other officials on the site to help the survivors.
On Sunday, a national memorial service is to be held at Oslo Spektrum arena, marking the end of a month of mourning in the Scandinavian country.
Stine Renate Haaheim, who survived the shooting spree on Utoya Island, said her feelings ranged from emptiness and extreme grief to joy when she returned to the place she had visited each summer for more than 10 years before the July 22 massacre.
"There was an extreme mix of feelings because it was very difficult and we are still in grief, but at the same time I was looking forward to seeing Utoya. I was hoping that in some kind of way it will still be the same island as it used to be," the 27-year-old lawmaker said after returning from Utoya. "For me it was really important, I wanted to go back as soon as possible."
The hardest part, she said, was seeing where her friends died.
"We started going around to all the places where our friends were killed and just taking a minute of silence and trying to remember all the good times we had with them and that was extremely hard, I think it's not possible to explain the feelings," Haaheim said, fighting back tears.
Many who returned to the island lit candles and laid handwritten notes in memory of their friends at the sites where they were shot during the summer camp organized by the youth wing of Norway's Labour Party. They also gathered to sing, just like they used to do on Utoya.
Eskil Pedersen, the leader of the party's youth organization, said his visit to the island with Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg and several hundred youth politicians had been "heavy, but fine."
"It was incredibly good to see them (the survivors) smiling again on Utoya," Pedersen told reporters.
Up to 1,000 survivors and relatives travelled to Utoya on Saturday, accompanied by police and medical staff, to face the painful memories of the shooting spree by a right-wing extremist. Their visit followed a similar arrangement on Friday, when around 500 relatives of the deceased came to see the sites where they lost their loved ones.
Stoltenberg - the leader of the Norwegian Labor Party - said he had wanted to visit "to take part in their mourning and be there for them."
Anders Behring Breivik has admitted killing 77 people on July 22 when he first detonated a truck bomb outside government offices in the capital, Oslo, and then went on a meticulously planned shooting spree on the island, some 25 miles (40 kilometres) away.
The right-wing extremist denies criminal guilt because he believes the massacre was necessary to save Norway and to punish politicians that have embraced multiculturalism.
Haaheim, who escaped Breivik's bullets by hiding near the shore and swimming to a boat, on Saturday, revisited the places where she had been on the day of the attack.
"I met up with the boys I was with, we walked together where we ran last time, and we tried to remember what it was like and what we said to each other," she said. "We spoke about what we had been doing - we actually told some jokes when we were hiding, because we were afraid of people panicking."
On that fateful day, Haaheim said she was inside a building when she saw people panicking and running around outside, so she decided to escape.
Haaheim said she and others found a hiding place near the shore, where they lay low until they heard the sound of bullets getting louder and discovered that a man who was dressed as a policeman was shooting at their friends. They then swam for their lives.
"He actually walked right over our heads," she said. "People were screaming 'the police are here, we are now safe' and then I remember me and my friend we just hugged each other and were extremely happy for maybe a half a second and then I saw him shooting people."
Haaheim said she remembers feelings of fear, chaos and being out of control extremely well, but sometimes feels like she is just describing a "crazy movie."
But, despite the sadness and grief, she said she doesn't feel any hatred.
"We have met bullets with flowers and showed that love is much ... stronger than hate, and speaking for myself revenge is not in my thoughts," Haaheim said. "I want to use my thoughts and my efforts on loving those who are still alive and remembering those who are not with us anymore."
Media were not allowed access to the heavily guarded island where Breivik spent 90 minutes executing the 69 people. Many of the victims were shot in the water as they tried to escape by swimming.
Norway's General Director of Health Bjoern Inge Larsen said he hoped the visits would help survivors and families of the victims come to grips with the deaths.
"The people going there today ... have a lot of anxiety," Larsen said. "They were life-threatened on this island four weeks ago in a very traumatizing manner, so what we are prepared for is to help them to overcome that anxiety."
The operation included 400 health care workers, psychiatrists, police and other officials on the site to help the survivors.
On Sunday, a national memorial service is to be held at Oslo Spektrum arena, marking the end of a month of mourning in the Scandinavian country.
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