Chicagoland

‘Our children have the right to walk down our streets’

By Michelle Martin
Sunday, November 15, 2015

‘Our children have the right to walk down our streets’

Father Michael Pfleger greetsTyshawn Lee's casket as it arrives at St. Sabina Church on Chicago's South Side on Nov. 10. The 9-year-old boy was shot in the head Nov. 2 in a neighborhood alley near his grandmother's house. Chicago police say the boy's execution-style death was the result of gang violence. Members of St. Sabina have raised nearly $54,000 in reward money for someone to come forward with the name of the shooter. (Karen Callaway/Catholic New World) (Karen Callaway/Catholic New World photo)
Pallbearers carry the remains of Tyshawn Lee as his casket arrives at St. Sabina Church on Chicago's South Side on Nov. 10. The 9-year-old boy was shot in the head Nov. 2 in a neighborhood alley near his grandmother's house. (Karen Callaway/Catholic New World photo) (Karen Callaway/Catholic New World photo)
Father Michael Pfleger greetsTyshawn Lee's casket as it arrives at St. Sabina Church on Chicago's South Side on Nov. 10. The 9-year-old boy was shot in the head Nov. 2 in a neighborhood alley near his grandmother's house. (Karen Callaway/Catholic New World photo)
Tyshawn Lee's small red casket arrives at St. Sabina Church on Chicago's South Side on Nov. 10. The 9-year-old boy was shot in the head Nov. 2 in a neighborhood alley near his grandmother's house. Chicago police say the boy's execution-like death was the result of gang violence. Members of St. Sabina have raised nearly $54,000 in reward money for someone to come forward with the name of the shooter. (Karen Callaway/Catholic New World photo) (Karen Callaway/Catholic New World photo)

The execution-style murder of 9-year-old Tyshawn Lee was not what God wanted to happen, Father Michael Pfleger said at Tyshawn’s funeral Nov. 10. “This is the face of the reality of evil,” Pfleger said. “This is evil right in our face.”

The funeral service was held at St. Sabina Church, 1210 W. 78th Place, about a mile from where Tyshawn was lured into alley on the 8000 block of South Damen Avenue and shot in the head and the back on the afternoon of Nov. 2.

Pfleger, pastor of St. Sabina, has been a high-profile leader in the Auburn-Gresham neighborhood and an outspoken advocate against gun violence for years. He addressed Tyshawn’s mother, Karla Lee, and his father, Pierre Stokes, in his sermon.

“This morning we meet at the uncomfortable intersection of pain and anger,” he said, “the intersection we have seen far too often.”

It would be wrong to say Tyshawn, an active child who loved school, video games and basketball, was in the wrong place at the wrong time, Pfleger said.

“Tyshawn was on his way to play basketball in the park near his grandmother’s house,” Pfleger said, “Our children have the right to walk down our streets. Our children have the right to play in the park. Our children have the right to sit on their porches. Our children have the right to be safe wherever they are in the city of Chicago. The murderer, the executioner, the assassin, was in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

Pfleger acknowledged that he is no fan of the prison system, but called on anyone who knows who shot Tyshawn to speak up because anyone who would target a child should be locked up, he said.

The code of silence — which Pfleger said exists not only on the streets, but also among law enforcement, in the church and among politicians — cannot lead people to protect Tyshawn’s killer out of fear, he said. “Something has to rise up in us and say ‘Enough! I will not be quiet!’” he said.

St. Sabina donated $5,000 to a reward fund for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the killer; that fund has reached $55,000.

Pfleger went on to indict a society and a system that allows not only crime, but poverty and despair and unemployment, to flourish in some communities, calling out politicians, police and the entertainment and gun industries, among others. He also asked everyone in the congregation to take a look at themselves.

“Where did we fail, all of us?” he said. “Where did we fail to create homes, churches, neighborhoods, communities that could give our children a chance?”

In the end, though, Pfleger said, believers know that Tyshawn now is living his eternal life. He spoke of Tyshawn stepping onto a heavenly basketball court and meeting many of those who have gone before, recalling the names of many young people who have been killed by gun violence in Chicago and around the country, including Tamir Rice, Treyvon Martin, Michael Brown and Hadiyah Pendleton. He connected them to martyrs of the civil rights movement from decades past, citing Emmett Till and the four girls killed in a church bombing in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963.

Dozens of members of Tyshawn’s extended family and friends and classmates from Joplin Elementary School filled the front pews. The congregation included congressmen and aldermen and actor Nick Cannon as well as community members and neighbors, and U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush delivered the closing prayer. Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel and U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan attended the visitation before the service, and celebrities including the Chicago Bulls’ Joachim Noah and filmmaker Spike Lee sent letters of condolence. Among the messages from religious leaders was a letter from Archbishop Cupich, Pfleger said.

Chicago police have suggested that Tyshawn was targeted in retaliation for what his killer believed were the gang activities of his father.

His father has denied being in a gang and has told reporters he does not believe that retaliation was the motive.

As of Nov. 10, there had been 428 murders reported in Chicago in 2015. Eight of them occurred between Tyshawn’s death and his funeral.

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