Chicago Sun-Times

Neighbors mourn brothers killed in W. Humboldt Pk. fire

- BY MARY NORKOL For the Sun-Times

A day before a deadly fire in their home, four young brothers spent their last Saturday making mud pies and digging for spiders in a local community garden.

The blaze Sunday left the boys — 11-yearold Angel Rodriguez, 6-year-old Jayden Cruz, 5-year-old Aiden Cruz and 4-year-old Axel Cruz — stuck in their West Humboldt Park basement apartment with only one exit.

Following the fire, the boys were each pronounced dead, the Cook County medical examiner’s office said Wednesday. Two adults, one of which was the boys’ mother, were taken to hospitals and treated for smoke inhalation and burns.

Neighbors and friends gathered — eyes brimming with tears — at the Children’s Garden of Hope down the street from the boys’ apartment Wednesday to mourn and remember them.

“It makes you love your kids a little more,” said Valerie Fernandez, a neighbor who attended the vigil and knew the boys through a local day care center. “Give them a kiss, and be happy that you’re all here together.”

Larry Walker lives two doors from the apartment that burned Sunday. As the unit went up in flames, Walker opened a window and carried one of the boys out of the fire.

“[I was thinking] just save the kids, just save the kids,” Walker told the Sun-Times.

Walker said he’s had trouble sleeping since the fire.

“I heard the rest of the kids screaming, but I couldn’t get to them,” he said. “It was heartbreak­ing, I’ve never been through something like this.”

As of Tuesday, what set the fire hadn’t been determined, though investigat­ors said it had been caused by an open flame in one of the back rooms. It’s unclear if the fire was accidental.

A GoFundMe page has been started to support the boys’ mother and sister as they recover.

At the vigil, people huddled and shared tight hugs as speakers prayed and offered condolence­s.

A makeshift memorial fashioned out of stuffed animals, mylar balloons and tall, skinny candles adorned the rock in front of the Children’s Garden of Hope where the brothers spent much of their time, according to Maura Madden, who runs the garden.

Madden said the brothers were tight-knit, especially the younger three.

“They were three little peas in a pod,” she said. “All so petite, so cute, but so well-mannered.”

The garden serves as a gathering spot, especially for neighborho­od children.

Alicia Escalante, 11, described herself as Angel Rodriguez’s girlfriend and classmate. Her eyes welled with tears as speakers echoed condolence­s for the family and prayed at the garden.

“She was so sad,” Alicia’s mom, Bianca Mena, said. “I don’t know how to feel. We want to help with anything we can.”

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES ?? Mourners gather for a vigil at the Children’s Garden of Hope on Wednesday for the brothers who died in a fire in their nearby basement apartment in West Humboldt Park.
ASHLEE REZIN/SUN-TIMES Mourners gather for a vigil at the Children’s Garden of Hope on Wednesday for the brothers who died in a fire in their nearby basement apartment in West Humboldt Park.

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