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Hadiya’s slaying shakes a community in transition

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Geri Redd talks on February 7, 2013, about the change in her Chicago, Illinois, neighborhood since Hadiya Pendleton was killed at the small park that was frequented by many children in the area. (Photo by Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune/MCT)

(MCT) — CHICAGO — Over the years, the Redd children believed the colorful tot lot next to their two-story house belonged to them alone, a haven of slides and swings in Chicago’s lakefront North Kenwood neighborhood that rivaled playgrounds in the suburbs.

“They would see other kids in the park and (say): ‘Why are there other kids in our park?’ ” Geri Redd, 40, said about her son Andrew, 9, and daughter Lauryn, 7. “And, we’d say: ‘You know, we let other people use it.’ ”

Since the shooting death of 15-year-old Hadiya Pendleton in late January, the children don’t want to go to Vivian Gordon Harsh Park anymore, she said. In a flash, the tot lot in the 4400 block of South Oakenwald Avenue has taken on the air of other troubled parks across Chicago, avoided because they’re believed to be the realms of gangs and drug dealers.

Early on, Chicago police suspected that whoever shot Hadiya was targeting a rival gang member when he fired several times and killed her eight days after she performed during the presidential inauguration festivities as a majorette with the King College Prep band. On Monday, police said the two men charged in Hadiya’s killing, Kenneth Williams and Michael Ward, said that they were looking for rivals who had shot Williams in July.

Hadiya’s killing — a mile from President Barack Obama’s family home in neighboring Kenwood —garnered international attention as a tragic example of the random gun violence gripping Chicago. Mayor Rahm Emanuel and police are trying to turn back a wave of shootings that led to 506 homicides last year and 42 more in January, the highest number in that month since 2002. First lady Michelle Obama attended Hadiya’s funeral Saturday, along with Emanuel and Gov. Pat Quinn.

The violence is largely concentrated in certain besieged areas of the city but is also rattling neighborhoods in transition such as North Kenwood and Oakland just to the north. Many new homeowners in those lakefront communities felt shielded from crime on their neighborhoods’ periphery, but Hadiya’s slaying has shattered those illusions.

“Even when there are changing neighborhoods like North Kenwood-Oakland, violence is still a problem,” said David Whittaker, executive director of the Chicago Area Project, a nonprofit that seeks to reduce juvenile crime through community building. “I don’t think any of us should feel safe and secure. As long as it’s next door, it affects us.”

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