Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago, city of gun violence — or healing?

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If the numbers are any indication, Chicago is headed for a disastrous, tragic summer. Last weekend, 65 people were shot, 18 fatally, including a 1-year-old, a 10-year-old and a 17-year-old. Two weekends ago, 104 people were shot, with 15 killed, including a 3-year-old and four teens. On May 31, 18 people were killed in a single Sunday.

In total, Chicago has seen 300-plus homicides this year.

“We’re all part of this city,” Chicago Police Supt. David Brown said Monday before announcing that 1,200 additional officers will be deployed on Chicago streets during the upcoming Fourth of July weekend. “We can no longer turn a blind eye to what’s going on with the violence here.”

But we cannot stress the following strongly enough: Policing alone will not end it.

Thankfully, eight weeks into his new job, Chicago’s top cop seems to get that.

“Here’s what these evil, murdering bastards do: They hire young kids that don’t have any significan­t criminal histories,” Brown said.

Those kids are working as armed guards for street corner drug markets “because of the failures” in social services and a need “to feed their families,” he continued.

“Without the help of mentors in my neighborho­od, I would have been one of these kids,” Brown said. “Kids don’t have that mentoring.”

They’re known as “shorties,” the supe said, meaning “short in stature and short in criminal history. It puts us in the position to have to arrest young people and put them in the pipeline to prison.

“These shorties are either the shooters or the victims. This is the complexity of Chicago’s violence.”

The takeaway is clear: Law enforcemen­t can fulfill its role by confiscati­ng firearms, arresting suspected gun offenders and moving drug dealers off the corner. But even so, there will always be another illegal gun for sale, another gang member ready to shoot at a rival.

In a normal world, we would jump at an offer by the president of the United States to lend a helping hand to Chicago, as Donald Trump pretended to do last week in a letter to Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Gov. J.B. Pritzker.

But let’s get real: Trump used the letter to grouse about high city taxes, “law and order” and Lightfoot’s and Pritzker’s supposed failings. He has no interest in a serious discussion about anything of importance, including gun-violence prevention and urban policy. Engaging with him is a fool’s errand. Chicago doesn’t have that time to waste.

Stopping the violence, starting to heal

Our city must marshal its own resources, financial and otherwise, against the epidemic. City Hall, Cook County, the state of Illinois, community groups, educators and civic and business leaders must pull together, channel their moral anger and financiall­y support every strategy that shows potential for curbing violence.

A little more than 10 years ago, then-Gov. Pat Quinn made a haphazard attempt to do this through a $54.5 million taxpayer-funded effort called the Neighborho­od Recovery Initiative. The program ended up embarrassi­ng Quinn: Politicall­y connected people cashed in, and key work to stop violence didn’t get done. The state’s auditor general concluded NRI was rife with “pervasive” mismanagem­ent.

That said, had the program been done right, we might not be writing this editorial today.

A more well-thought-out version of Quinn’s program — with the right amounts of money going to the right organizati­ons — might play a key role in turning around violent neighborho­ods today.

How about more funding for the Metropolit­an Peace Academy, which trains street outreach workers to respond to shootings and help prevent further retaliator­y violence by gang members? How about more support for ConTextos, which gives young Black and Brown men who’ve gotten caught up in the violence a chance at using words to help them escape it?

In a compelling essay in the Sunday SunTimes, one such man — 25-year-old Charles Woodhouse — explained why he and other young Black men must have an opportunit­y to heal, emotionall­y as well as physically, from the trauma that too many of them experience daily.

Imagine being 11 years old and seeing someone murdered. Imagine being shot 21 times at age 15 and having to spend two years learning to walk, talk, drink and eat again. Imagine going to prison at age 17, then being released without an education that could help you put your life back on track.

All of that and more happened to Woodhouse, who grew up in Auburn Gresham on the South Side.

“The problem doesn’t start with homicide counts. It doesn’t start with numbers shot. It starts earlier in our communitie­s,” he wrote. “We — and I’m talking about Auburn Gresham, but I think I’m also talking about so many neighborho­ods and so many young Black men — have constantly lived in trauma.“

Read Woodhouse’s essay and think about how you would answer these questions that he poses:

“Do we really want Chicago to only be known for its violence? Or can we take a chance and let us be known for a real investment in healing?”

“Never let a good crisis go to waste.” The GOP is about to hand us a good crisis by killing Obamacare before the Supreme Court. If they succeed, 20 million citizens will lose coverage. The call will then come loud and clear that this country needs Medicare for All. And the GOP, who hate letting anyone get benefits from the government, will face their greatest defeat. Lee Knohl, Evanston

Send letters to letters@suntimes.com. Please include your neighborho­od or hometown and a phone number for verificati­on purposes.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN-TIMES ?? A table of guns allegedly confiscate­d by police officers is displayed as Police Supt. David Brown addressed weekend gun violence during a news conference on Monday.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN-TIMES A table of guns allegedly confiscate­d by police officers is displayed as Police Supt. David Brown addressed weekend gun violence during a news conference on Monday.

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