A climate activist has died after self-immolating outside of the Supreme Court on Earth Day.
Wynn Bruce, 50, lit himself on fire at approximately 6:30 p.m. on Friday.
Bruce, a Buddhist from Colorado, was airlifted to the hospital with critical burns. He passed away at the hospital on Saturday. #Breaking: Just in - Video of the police on the scene near the Supreme Court building in Washington #DC, showing you and hearing the sounds of a person screaming in agony after he set himself on fire, and after the fire was extinguished by police officers. #US pic.twitter.com/Xpkee02BC7
— Sotiri Dimpinoudis (@sotiridi) April 22, 2022
While his motive has not yet been announced by law enforcement, Bruce had shared a link to an online class about climate change on Facebook in 2020 — and went back to it last year commenting "4/22/2022" with a fire emoji.
On March 28, Wayne wrote on Facebook, “this is not humor. It is all about breathing.”
Boulder-based Buddhist priest Sensei Kritee Kanko posted about Bruce's death on Twitter, claiming that he was a friend and the self-immolating was "not suicide."
"This guy was my friend. He meditated with our sangha. This act is not suicide. This is a deeply fearless act of compassion to bring attention to climate crisis. We are piecing together info but he had been planning it for atleast one year. #wynnbruce I am so moved," Kanko wrote. This guy was my friend. He meditated with our sangha. This act is not suicide. This is a deeply fearless act of compassion to bring attention to climate crisis. We are piecing together info but he had been planning it for atleast one year. #wynnbruce I am so moved. https://t.co/bHoRaLK6Fr
— Dr. K. Kritee (@KriteeKanko) April 24, 2022
Bruce's LinkedIn account says that he was a photojournalist and had attended Front Range Community College and the Community College of Denver.
Self-immolation has long been considered the most extreme form of protest, with many arguing that it is also "non-violent," as the person typically goes to great lengths to make sure no one else is harmed — including the 14th Dalai Lama.
"I think the self-burning itself on practice of non-violence. These people, you see, they [could instead] easily use bomb explosive, more casualty people. But they didn't do that. Only sacrifice their own life. So this also is part of practice of non-violence," the Dalai Lama said in 2013, according to a report from ABC News.
In 1965, Norman Morrison lit himself on fire outside the Pentagon to protest the war in Vietnam.
In 2017, a man lit himself on fire outside of Trump Hotel to protest the election of former President Donald Trump. A man in a wheelchair-type electric scooter lit his jacket on fire outside the White House fence on Friday and was hospitalized with what appeared to be non-life threatening injuries, the U.S. Secret Service said. pic.twitter.com/DMwJV0sL12"I was trying to light myself on fire as an act of protest," the man told NBC News at the time. " Protesting the fact that we've elected someone who is completely incapable of respecting the Constitution of the United States."
In 2019, a man on an electric scooter lit himself on fire outside the White House and survived, though his motive was never revealed.
— Srbija Evropa (@srbija_eu) April 12, 2019
One month later, another man lit himself on fire outside of the White House. He did not survive. A man lit himself on fire outside of the White House
Warning: This video contains graphic content pic.twitter.com/93HGmTLg8n
— Bloomberg Quicktake (@Quicktake) May 29, 2019
Self-immolation has been practiced for centuries and is considered a valid and important form of protest by some who follow Mahayana Buddhism and Hinduism.
If you are struggling with suicidal thoughts or are experiencing a mental health crisis you can call the National Suicide Prevention hotline, 24/7, at 1-800-273-8255 or go to SuicidePreventionLifeline.org.