GLENDALE, Arizona – At a packed memorial for her husband at State Farm Stadium, Erika Kirk said she forgives the man accused of killing Charlie Kirk and pledged to expand Kirk’s work reaching young people.
“My husband Charlie, he wanted to save young men just like the one who took his life,” she said through tears. “On the cross, our savior said, ‘Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.’ That man, that young man, I forgive him. I forgive him because it is what Christ did, and it is what Charlie would do.”
Her words drew sustained applause inside State Farm Stadium, where mourners filled the seats to celebrate the 31-year-old Turning Point USA founder. Erika’s speech wove together themes of grief, faith, and determination, as she honored her husband’s life while vowing to continue his work.
Kirk described the moment she arrived at a Utah hospital and saw her husband’s body after the shooting. She recalled the shock and anguish, but also what she called a sign of God’s mercy: a faint smile on his lips. She said it convinced her Charlie had not suffered, that one moment he was debating on campus, and the next he was in paradise.
She turned to scripture to make sense of her loss, pointing to Isaiah 6:8, “Here I am, Lord. Send me,” a verse her husband had cited on stage two years earlier. “Charlie answered that call,” she said, adding that the Lord’s Prayer had become her greatest source of comfort in the days since his death.
Rather than anger or violence in response to the assassination, Erika said she saw something else: a spiritual renewal.
“This past week we saw people open a Bible for the first time in a decade,” she told the crowd. “We saw people pray for the first time since they were children. We saw people go to a church service for the first time in their entire lives.”
Erika spoke movingly of their relationship, describing it as “the best thing that ever happened” to both of them. She told stories of love notes Charlie never missed writing, each one ending with the question: “Please, let me know how I can better serve you as a husband.”
She challenged men to lead their families with courage and love, and women to embrace virtue and strength, saying Charlie believed God’s design for marriage was a gift meant to be shared widely.
She also used the memorial to chart a future for Turning Point USA, the organization her husband created. Elevated to CEO in the days after his death, she pledged to grow the movement by launching new chapters, hosting more campus events, and deepening its focus on faith and family.
“Charlie and I were united in purpose. His passion was my passion, and now his mission is my mission. Everything that Turning Point USA built through Charlie’s vision and hard work, we will make 10 times greater through the power of his memory,” Erika said.
She vowed to open thousands of new chapters, bring in pastors and congregations under the TPUSA Faith banner, and continue holding debates and campus events.
“No assassin will ever stop us from standing up to defend those rights,” she said.
VANCE HAILS CHARLIE KIRK AS ‘A MARTYR FOR THE CHRISTIAN FAITH’ AT ARIZONA MEMORIAL
As she closed, Erika framed her husband’s short life as a “turning point” for the country. She urged the crowd to choose prayer, family, courage, and, above all, Christ.
“I love you, Charlie baby,” she said softly. “And we’ll make you proud.”