
Chicago’s Juneteenth celebration turns violent when gunmen open fire on a crowd, injuring thirteen people on the South Side.
Michael Blount watched his Juneteenth celebration turn into a nightmare when a red SUV pulled up to the crowd near West 95th Street and South Princeton Avenue in Chicago’s Princeton Park neighborhood late Friday evening.
Two gunmen opened fire into the gathering, leaving at least thirteen people injured and shattering what was supposed to be a peaceful moment of freedom and community.
The violence happened in seconds, but the impact rippled far beyond Chicago’s South Side.
What made this moment even more painful was the contrast with what was happening everywhere else across America.
While Chicago’s South Side was dealing with the aftermath of senseless gunfire, communities from coast to coast were celebrating Juneteenth the way it’s meant to be celebrated.
Houston kicked off its 19 Days of Juneteenth with the Celebration Freedom Festival at Emancipation Park, featuring everything from a Red Foods Cookout Cookoff to a Juneteenth Spades Tournament and live R&B, jazz, and gospel performances.
Baltimore’s AFRAM festival hit its 50th anniversary with headliners like Mario, Charlie Wilson, SWV, and The Lox performing at Druid Hill Park for three straight days.
Over in Washington, D.C., the National Museum of African American History and Culture celebrated Opal Lee’s 100th birthday with the Juneteenth Community Day, bringing together food, music, storytelling, and Go-Go performances that had the whole city moving.
Atlanta’s 14th annual Juneteenth Atlanta Parade and Music Festival brought twenty-plus floats and marching bands to Piedmont Park, while Galveston, the birthplace of Juneteenth itself, hosted its traditional parade and community picnic.
These celebrations represented what Juneteenth actually means: freedom, community, and Black culture thriving together.
Back in Chicago, according to ABC7, the victims of the senseless gunfire ranged from a 17-year-old boy to a 47-year-old man, with one 26-year-old in critical condition.
Blount’s words captured the heartbreak perfectly: “It was a shame that it happened on Juneteenth.”

