(15 Apr 2012) 1. Mid of woman lighting candles in church
2. Close of cross, tilt down as procession enters church at beginning of service
3. Jesus statue in church
4. Priest starting church service
5. Wide of ceiling, tilt down to church interior during service
6. Various of small memorial site outside cathedral for the 77 people killed by Anders Behring Breivik last year
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Olav Dag Hauge, Dean of Oslo Cathedral:
"In the first time, we didn''t believe it at all, how could a person who is (of) the same culture as our culture, and from our own country, do a thing like that? But then we, in a way, thought that it is better for us that it comes from inside, for that we can handle. We can''t handle what (is) coming from outside."
8. Close of memorial in front of cathedral depicting model of heart with inscription reading (Norwegian/English): "Greatest of all is love"
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Astrid Kvaame, Oslo resident:
"It (the trial) is necessary. You know, we can''t close it back. We have to be finished with the whole thing, and then we have to go through these days (of the trial), and of course they will be hard."
10. Mid of memorial site
11. Tracking shot of couple entering cathedral
12. Wide of Oslo Cathedral
STORYLINE:
As Norway prepares for the trial of Anders Behring Breivik, who confessed to killing 77 people last July, churchgoers at Oslo Cathedral on Sunday reflected on the crime and how it affected their country.
Breivik''s trial begins on Monday, and he is set to testify for five days, explaining why he set off a bomb in downtown Oslo that killed eight, and then shot to death 69 people, mostly teenagers, at a Labour Party youth camp on Utoya island.
A memorial for the victims, in the form of a heart, has been set up outside Oslo Cathedral.
Inside, Norwegians prayed and thought about the killings that shocked the world.
Following Sunday service, the church''s dean, Olav Dag Hauge, said Norwegians were at first taken aback that it was one of their own that had committed the crimes.
"We didn''t believe it at all, how could a person who is (of) the same culture as our culture, and from our own country, do a thing like that? But then we, in a way, thought that it is better for us that it comes from inside, for that we can handle. We can''t handle what (is) coming from outside," he said.
One churchgoer, Astrid Kvaame, said that while it would be difficult for Norway to go through the trial, it was important to gain closure on the killings.
"We have to be finished with the whole thing, and then we have to go through these days (of the trial), and of course they will be hard," she said.
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