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Obama to visit Chicago, address gun violence

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“Her being there is very important, since it was her neighborhood,” Jackson said. “I think the president’s coming is important because she did not deal with the politics … She dealt with the calming concern for a broken-hearted family,” he said.

Jackson made a public appeal earlier this month for the president to address gun violence in his adopted Chicago home.

Because of the upcoming presidential visit, parents of children who have been shot and killed in the city will finally feel heard by Obama, said Annette Nance-Holt, a mother who lost her son Blair Holt in 2007 after he was shot on a crowded city bus.

“This sends a message to the parents here that their kids are important, too,” Holt said. “It may not have been a big shooting with an assault rifle. But to see him come and hopefully rally some support here means a lot.”

The White House said the president’s visits to Asheville, N.C., Atlanta and Chicago this week will also press issues raised in his State of the Union speech on Tuesday.

“The president will travel to Chicago for an event amplifying some of the policy proposals included in the State of the Union that focus on strengthening the economy for the middle class and the Americans striving to get there,” a White House official said in a statement.

Clergy on Sunday praised President Obama’s decision to address gun violence in Chicago, arguing his speech could bring greater attention to violence plaguing Chicago communities.

“Hopefully and prayerfully, his coming will make a real impact,” said the Rev. Kenneth Giles of Second Mount Olive Missionary Baptist Church in the Austin neighborhood. “Now that the nation is focused on (gun violence,) maybe they will hear his voice and hear what he has to say.”

The Rev. Michael Pfleger, senior pastor of Saint Sabina Catholic Church on the South Side, said he’s grateful the president is “zooming in” on the issue.

“What better place to address it than his home and a city that has really become, let’s face it, the poster boy of gun violence,” Pfleger said.

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