Chicago Sun-Times

Neighbors mourn Lincoln Square toddler killed by car

- BY MARY NORKOL

Two-year-old Raphael “Rafi” Cardenas took his last scooter ride earlier this month. On Wednesday, his neighbors gathered to remember him and call for change.

Less than three weeks after Rafi was struck and killed by a car while driving a mini scooter in Lincoln Square, his neighbors showed up by the dozen to mourn and celebrate his life at a block party Wednesday in his honor.

Rafi was one of three children hit and killed in Chicago car crashes in three weeks, prompting a renewed push for pedestrian and cyclist safety measures.

“I’m hoping we can look back and say this is a time when things changed,” Ald. Matt Martin (47th) told the Sun-Times.

Martin said the tragic deaths of children need to be followed with city action on meaningful safety measures, including concrete-protected bike lanes on busy roads like Clark Street and working with Cook County to address problemati­c intersecti­ons.

“This could be an inflection point,” he said.

Upbeat music accompanie­d kids riding bikes and drawing with chalk outside Sulzer Regional Library as neighborho­od groups and the Chicago Department of Transporta­tion spoke about bike safety.

“A car crash is not an accident; it’s something that can be predicted and prevented,” said Department of Transporta­tion Safe Ambassador Lizeth Solis.

For some friends of Rafi’s family, like Max Pardo, his death sparked sadness that quickly turned to rage. An avid cyclist himself, Pardo said he recently visited the intersecti­on where Rafi was struck, Leavitt Street and Eastwood Avenue, and watched drivers roll through stop signs.

“I just fumed at every single one,” he said.

He described Rafi as “the most chill, laid-back kid,” and remembered seeing him with his parents in Lincoln Square’s Winnemac Park.

“He was just happy to be there,” Pardo’s partner Olivia Lothary added. “Just hanging out on dad’s shoulders.”

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Chalk art on the pavement says “Rafi Forever” at a block party Wednesday to celebrate the life of 2-year-old Raphael “Rafi” Cardenas on Leavitt Street behind the Sulzer Library.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Chalk art on the pavement says “Rafi Forever” at a block party Wednesday to celebrate the life of 2-year-old Raphael “Rafi” Cardenas on Leavitt Street behind the Sulzer Library.
 ?? ?? Ald. Matt Martin
Ald. Matt Martin

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