Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Teen shot Friday in Marquette Park dies

- — Alice Yin

A 16-year-old boy died after being shot multiple times Friday night in the Marquette Park neighborho­od on the Southwest Side, authoritie­s said.

About 8:50 p.m., Julian N. Castillo was visiting a friend in the 6300 block of South Richmond Street when two males started arguing with him, according to Chicago police and the Cook County medical examiner’s office. The pair started punching Castillo, who ran out the apartment and down the street.

The two males chased Castillo and fired shots, police said. The 16-year-old was taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn with gunshot wounds throughout his body.

Castillo was pronounced dead at 9:16 p.m., according to the medical examiner’s office. An autopsy Saturday determined Castillo died of multiple gunshot wounds, and his death was ruled a homicide.

Two males were in custody and being questioned by Area One detectives.

What was your life like at this time last year?

You may not remember the details, but if you think back to the end of February 2020, or the first few days of March, you may remember that you still resided in the vanished land we now call normal. Most Americans did.

One thing I remember is that on Friday, Feb. 28, I wrote my first coronaviru­s column, a piece on how we needed to stop touching our faces if we wanted to avoid this new disease. “No face touching!” was guidance from the experts, and it seemed worth sharing.

But fewer than a half-dozen Americans had died of the virus at that point. If we’d heard about masks, it was only to be told we didn’t need them. Social distancing? Not in the common vocabulary. Lockdown? Here in the land of the free and the home of the brave, that was something that happened only in prisons.

Even then, though, I felt a flutter of apprehensi­on, the kind you feel when you sense a storm coming while the sky remains clear. I’d flown back from New York earlier in the week and, noticing a guy in the airport security line wearing a mask, I’d thought, “Does he know something the rest of us don’t?” I registered the fear and then got on the packed airplane without a second thought.

That Friday night, after I finished my face-touching column, I headed without qualm to the Billy Goat Tavern for a farewell party for a couple of colleagues. Dozens of us crowded inside, drinking, laughing, crying a little, shaking hands, hugging. We probably touched our faces.

Supersprea­der event? Who’d ever heard of that? Fortunatel­y, as far as I know, that night didn’t turn out to be one, but a year later I often think of how easily it could have.

I look back on that weekend as an anniversar­y of sorts, the anniversar­y of the last “normal” weekend, because even though I went out to dinner and to the gym the following weekend, it was with virus-induced anxiety. Since anniversar­ies are a nudge for reflection, today it’s worth reflecting on what we didn’t know a year ago, what we couldn’t allow ourselves to believe and what our ignorance then might teach us that’s helpful today.

Consider a few Tribune headlines from early 2020:

Jan. 21: O’Hare to begin screening passengers for virus. Cases of the new respirator­y illness confirmed in U.S.

Jan. 30: Chicago reports the first coronaviru­s person-toperson transmissi­on in U.S.

Feb. 6: Despite low risk, coronaviru­s fears viral

Feb. 9: First American dies of coronaviru­s

Feb. 12: WHO settles on an official name for virus: COVID-19

March 2: U.S. death toll climbs to 6 as viral crisis eases in China

March 8: WHO resists declaring coronaviru­s a “pandemic.” Organizati­on says label could cause some to lose hope

Soon, the American death toll climbed from six to nine to 11. Flight attendants started offering hand sanitizer to passengers, and hand sanitizer sold out at stores. Starbucks stopped using refillable cups. Finally, on March 11, the World Health Organizati­on applied the name it had been avoiding: pandemic.

Let that sink in. In the course of a few winter weeks, we went from no known person-toperson transmissi­ons in this country to a declaratio­n of pandemic.

Now here we are a year later. Late winter 2021. A few days ago, President Joe Biden ordered flags lowered to half-staff on all federal buildings to mark the COVID-related deaths of more than 500,000 Americans. Half a million people. Each one of them was a person, and most of them, it’s safe to assume, were loved by other persons who are now in mourning.

Endless words have been spent on how much we’ve all lost in this year of death and disease, how much this time has changed us, individual­ly and collective­ly. Our imaginatio­ns have been stretched to the limits, and it’s still too soon to understand all the ways such vast loss has changed us.

Now here we are a year later, with hope on the horizon. Vaccines have arrived. We hear prediction­s of a return to gathering, to travel, to a life that resembles what we remember.

But if there’s one lesson to take from the last normal weekend, it’s this: We’re not as smart as we think we are. This virus and its new strains will outfox us if we aren’t careful. Careful means continuing to wear masks and keep our distance and wash our hands, to endure these precaution­s a while longer. We’re a lot wiser than we were a year ago, but we need to stay aware of how much we don’t know.

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 ??  ?? Rex W. Huppke has today off.
Rex W. Huppke has today off.

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