Daily Southtown

Englewood Peace Fest honors shooting victims

- By Jake Sheridan jsheridan@chicagotri­bune.com

A closed-off Englewood block filled with children playing among green trees under sunny skies was spotted with one essential color: orange.

The shade, representi­ng gun violence awareness, colored T-shirts and tablecloth­s throughout the afternoon’s Peace Fest at 64th and Honore streets on Saturday, where dozens of community groups shared resources and celebrated with music, art and food to mark Wear Orange Weekend and honor victims of gun violence.

Throughout the “Peace Campus,” a block composed of over a dozen formerly abandoned buildings and vacant properties repurposed by neighborho­od organizati­ons to care for kids, create safe play spaces and support the community, early summer joy swirled in every direction.

Boys played basketball. A group of men grilled as others sold tacos. Some kids jumped in a yellow bounce house, while some painted or rode bikes. Vendors shared plants and groceries and encouraged people to sign up to get consistent help or serve others themselves.

“We can stop the violence ourselves simply by shifting the culture of our communitie­s,” said the festival stage’s host, Tanya Lozano, founder of Healthy Hood, a community group that hosted the event alongside Imagine Englewood If, We Grow Chicago, Think Outside Da Block and Moms Demand Action.

The peace fest is the first of a series of similar events nearly 70 community groups plan to host throughout Chicago this summer that are also aimed at preventing violence, Lozano said.

“We want to get to people before the problems start. We want to prevent it from happening. Not dealing with symptoms, but really getting to the root of what is actually happening,” she said.

The groups in Englewood were also hoping to show unity between Black and brown Chicago communitie­s amid rising tensions over the city spending millions of dollars to support the thousands of arriving asylum-seekers, she added.

Mashaun Ali sold T-shirts at his booth calling for a summer “crime drought.” The entreprene­ur, who runs streetwear company TRAP House Chicago, uses the sales’ proceeds to fund restorativ­e justice work, like “peace circle” discussion­s that connect at-odds groups before conflict erupts, he said.

Activist and musician Heavy

Crownz, who emceed the event’s stage as co-host, helped pass around the mic as a group ad-libbed raps to beats as festivalgo­ers watched. The crowd erupted as a preschoole­r took a turn and strung together a series of rhymes.

“We have the power here, and we’ve chosen to create spaces to empower us, to enlighten our own and grow,” said Crownz, who works as Imagine Englewood If ’s campus director.

When artist Allen Washington took the block festival’s stage, he reflected in one song about stereotype­s he said contribute­d to the death of Elijah McClain, the 23-year-old killed after police in Aurora, Colorado, restrained him in 2019 as he walked home from a convenienc­e store.

Mainstream rap music doesn’t often reflect the reality of life in communitie­s of color, said Washington, who directs art and culture projects for Healthy Hood. He tries to focus on “unity, positivity and solidarity” in his music, he added.

“I lost myself trying to find my people. I’ve been stuck between the good and the evil. I was told to keep my third eye open so I can see all the creatures. And we shouldn’t last long, at least that’s what they tell us. We moving down a path that’s so wrong. There’s no truth in what they sell us,” he sang.

The orange fabric ribbons tied to fences and around trees lining the block represente­d the 30,000 children killed by gun violence since the 2012 mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticu­t, activist and artist Jacqueline von Edelberg said.

The ribbons had been previously displayed on the block, but were moved to Highland Park’s Art Center after the mass shooting last May at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas. The ribbons were already on display in Highland Park when the suburb experience­d its own mass shooting on July 4.

Gun violence is a common thread, von Edelberg said.

“This is the literal fabric that connects us. It’s all the same: the South Side, the West Side, the North Side,” she said.

Michelle Rashad, executive director of the organizati­on Imagine Englewood If, made an obvious observatio­n at the festival: Summertime in Chicago is amazing.

“But summertime in Chicago also brings people a lot of anxiety, a lot of fear, a lot of unknown because of the gun violence that does happen in our city,” Rashad added.

The shot and killed Black and brown people often represente­d in media by crime briefs and statistics are more than the short mentions they get, she said. She hoped the event flagging gun violence might challenge the numbness many people regularly affected by violence feel.

“We don’t accept the violence that happens in our neighborho­ods and we have the resources to help people, to address some of their most basic needs,” Rashad said. More support from businesses and government­s to urgently address violence are always needed, she said, “but our greatest resource is us.”

Rashad’s neighborho­od group operates a litany of projects, including a lead poisoning prevention program, a seven-week summer camp for 50 kids staffed by teens, and a community garden.

People throughout Chicago and in Englewood are “very familiar” with the violence that afflicts communitie­s during summers, she said. The city needs to be proactive to address what causes violence and not just react to the instances in which it flares up, she added.

Adrienne Swanigan and Temika Blackman manned a booth for Purpose Over Pain, an organizati­on made up of mothers who have lost children to Chicago gun violence. They passed out sanitizer bottles marked with the groups’ hotline for parents whose kids have been shot and killed.

“On the weekend, if you don’t work, your mind can be all over the place,” Swanigan said.

 ?? CHRIS SWEDA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Tanya Lozano, center, dances with others at Peace Fest in the 6400 block of South Honore Street in the West Englewood neighborho­od on Saturday.
CHRIS SWEDA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Tanya Lozano, center, dances with others at Peace Fest in the 6400 block of South Honore Street in the West Englewood neighborho­od on Saturday.

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