'Oh, my, gosh, they would never have known:' New warnings about rabies outbreaks as cases riseNew Foto - 'Oh, my, gosh, they would never have known:' New warnings about rabies outbreaks as cases rise

Six deaths from rabies have been reported over the last 12 months in the U.S., the highest number in years, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. From rabid skunks in Kentucky to gray foxes in Arizona and raccoons on Long Island, wild animals in more than a dozen places across the U.S. have experienced a rise in the deadly disease, at least partly driven by shrinking natural habitats and better surveillance. "We are currently tracking 15 different likely outbreaks," said Dr. Ryan Wallace, who leads the rabies team at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Areas with outbreaks include Nassau County, New York, which issued a health threat over rabid animals last month, as well as Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and parts of Alaska, Arizona, California, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, North Carolina, Oregon and Vermont. "There are parts of the United States where it does seem like we're getting more calls and more reports," Wallace said, noting an increase in rabid foxes in the West and rabid bats across the country. "Whether those numbers are truly significant increases, we can only tell at the end of the year. But right now, at peak rabies season, it does seem like activity is higher." Rabies is present in all states except Hawaii. Bats are the most common cause ofrabies infection in peopleand are also the most likely species to beinfected with the virus, according to the CDC. Each year,1.4 million Americansare checked for possible exposure to the rabies virus and 100,000 receive a series of vaccine injections to prevent them from becoming ill, according to the CDC. Last month, Samantha Lang was one of them. Land, 22, was likely bitten by a bat that flew into her apartment from a hole in her ceiling in Greenwood, Indiana. The day after she noticed tiny marks on her arm, she discovered the bat, alive, hanging from her air conditioning vent. After contacting her local health department, she was urged to receive rabies post-exposure prophylaxis. She got it immediately. "I never thought that I would have to worry about it," Lang said. The rabies virus invades the central nervous system and is almost always fatal once symptoms start. Early symptoms, which can begin about a week or up to a year after exposure, may resemble the flu and progress quickly to confusion, paralysis, salivating, hallucinations and difficulty swallowing, followed by death within weeks. The number of human deaths over the last year is concerning, experts say. In comparison, from 2015 to 2024, 17 cases of human rabies were reported, two of which were contracted outside the U.S., according to the CDC. People are most often exposed to the rabies virus through the saliva of an infected wild animal that can get into the mouth, eyes or a wound, which is why bites are so dangerous. Prior to the 1960s, most cases in humans were from infected pets, usually a dog. Thanks to strict pet vaccination laws, the canine strain of rabies has been eliminated from the U.S. One of the more dramatic increases in wildlife infections has been in Franklin County, near the Research Triangle region of central North Carolina, which experienced a doubling of confirmed cases in wild animals over the past year. "For the number of confirmed cases to go up 100%, and we're not even over this year's rabies season, that's a big deal," said Scott LaVigne, the county's health director. LaVigne suspects that the urban growth that's been encroaching on wild animal habitats has been an important factor driving the spread of rabies. "The population of Franklin County since 2010 has increased 35%, and those people have to live somewhere," he said. "And so you're seeing increased land development and housing tracts going in." Animals that might have been isolated before are now crowded together, and if one gets rabies, it's more likely to spread to others in the group, LaVigne said. People may not always know they've been exposed to a rabid animal. There have been reported deaths from people whodidn't realize they had been bittenor scratched by a bat and who had refused the lifesaving vaccines. In December, aCalifornia teacher died a monthafter removing a bat from her classroom. She didn't know she'd been infected. The virus can evolve and manifest in different ways, depending on the animal species and the strain. Most people expect a rabid animal to be aggressive and vicious, but sometimes the infected animal can be quite docile. "There's a strain of rabies where the animals get very, very friendly," LaVigne said. A "family saw a raccoon that kind of showed up on their front step and he was sick and he was so cute and wanted to be petted. And you know when raccoons aren't barring their teeth they are pretty cute." The family petted and fed the animal until it died. They called animal services to pick up the body "and thank God they did, because when they sent the brain out to be tested, it was positive, and so the whole family had to get vaccinated," LaVigne said. "Oh, my gosh, they never would have known if they hadn't called animal services." As rabies seems to be spreading more in wildlife, veterinarians are especially worried about vaccine hesitancy spreading among pet owners, a dangerous trend that could lead to more dogs — and their owners — becoming infected. A 2023 study published in the journalVaccinefound in a nationally representative sample of Americans that nearly 40% believed canine vaccines were unsafe and 37% believed that vaccines could lead their dogs to develop cognitive issues, such as autism. Dr. Gabriella Motta, a veterinarian from Glenolden, Pennsylvania, and a co-author of the study, says she often sees clients who are concerned vaccines might hurt their dog. "It's an issue we're worried about, that could be on the rise in the future," Motta said. "If we continue to see plummeting vaccination rates or increasing vaccine hesitancy, are we going to see [rabies] in more pets, and not just wildlife? We're kind of starting to sound the alarms." Rabies vaccines after exposure have come a long way since the shots were injected into people's abdomens. The current series involves an injected dose of immunoglobulin, which contains rabies antibodies, immediately after exposure, followed by four vaccine injections. All the shots are now given in the arm. The rule of thumb, experts say, is that rabies should be suspected any time a wild animal is behaving in an aberrant way, whether it's too aggressive, too fearless or too friendly.

'Oh, my, gosh, they would never have known:' New warnings about rabies outbreaks as cases rise

'Oh, my, gosh, they would never have known:' New warnings about rabies outbreaks as cases rise Six deaths from rabies have been repo...
India looks to mend ties with China as Trump's tariffs push it away from U.S.New Foto - India looks to mend ties with China as Trump's tariffs push it away from U.S.

HONG KONG —Indiais increasingly important to the United States as a key Asian security partner and a counterweight toChina. But PresidentDonald Trump's tariffs may be pushing it closer to Beijing instead. Indian Prime MinisterNarendra Modiis in China this weekend for the first time in seven years to attend a security forum with other world leaders including Russian PresidentVladimir Putin. On Sunday Modi and Chinese PresidentXi Jinpingmet in Tianjin, where China is hosting a summit of the 10-member Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. Xi told Modi that the world's two most populous countries should be "partners rather than rivals" and that the "dragon" and "elephant" should come together. Modi told Xi that they were "committed to progressing our relations based on mutual respect, trust and sensitivities." Their meeting comes days after the Trump administrationdoubled tariffs on Indian importsto 50% as punishment for buying Russian oil. The stinging levy, one of the highest on any U.S. trading partner in the world, has raised concerns that it could push India closer to China despite years of tensions. "Until about three, four months ago, relations between China and India were not bad, they were very bad. They were not talking to each other," said Kishore Mahbubani, a Singaporean diplomat and former president of the United Nations Security Council. "I have to give credit where it's due: President Donald Trump's decision to impose a 50% tariff on India is one of the biggest shocks that India has ever got in recent times," Mahbubani said Wednesday at an event in Hong Kong organized by the University of Hong Kong's Centre on Contemporary China and the World. India, along with China, is a top purchaser of Russian crude oil, which Trump says is helping to fund Moscow's war on Ukraine. New Delhi says such criticism is "unjustified and unreasonable," and that the U.S. previously encouraged it to buy the oil to keep global prices from soaring as Western countries suspended their purchases. While India and China share a common grievance over Trump's tariffs, which in China's case have reachedas high as 145%, analysts say their relationship still faces major challenges and that Modi's China visit is mainly a symbolic display of resilience. "Xi wants Modi and India to show that they are working with him and with China to the extent that they are not following the Trump or U.S. lead in containing China," said Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at the SOAS University of London. Earlier this month, the Chinese ambassador to New Delhi delivered a rare public defense of India against the tariff increase, calling the U.S. a "bully." It was a major step up from the deep freeze that began in 2020 with a border clash in India's Himalayan region of Ladakh that killed at least 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers and plunged relations so low that the two countries suspended direct flights. Only seven months ago, India was entering Trump's second presidential term in a relatively strong position, with Modi among the first world leaders to visit his "dear friend" at the White House. But tensions soon arose, with Trump complaining that Apple wasproducing iPhones in Indiainstead of the U.S. India also rejected Trump's claim that hebrokered a ceasefirein its four-day conflict with neighboring Pakistan. New Delhi was further incensed weeks later when Trump hosted Pakistan's powerful army chief at the White House in an unprecedented meeting. "The Indians saw this as a slap in the face for them," Mahbubani said. "So there is now, even as we are speaking, a tremendous amount of re-evaluation going on in Delhi about where India's place in the world is." At the same time, China and India have been moving cautiously to restore their relationship, reaching a deal toresolve their 2020 border standoffand announcing theresumption of direct flights. But not everybody is convinced about China extending a friendly hand, and the two countries still have major differences. One of the biggest is China's ties with Pakistan, India's archrival and a fellow nuclear power. During their conflict in May, Pakistan said it had used Chinese-made J-10C fighter jets to shoot down Indian military aircraft. "There was a huge step up in the kind of assistance that the Chinese were providing Pakistan, not merely in terms of selling them equipment and platforms, but on intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance," Gautam Bambawale, a former Indian ambassador to Beijing, said in an interview. "So we will go by actions on those things." Bambawale said it could take "months, if not years" for the relationship to return to where it was before 2020, let alone reach new heights. Though India and China are strong trading partners, that has not been enough to smooth over other diplomatic issues. Earlier this month, after a meeting in New Delhi between Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and his Indian counterpart, S. Jaishankar, Beijing released a readout suggesting Jaishankar had acknowledged thatTaiwan, a self-governing island democracy, "is a part of China." When asked if Jaishankar made that statement, an Indian government official who was familiar with the discussions between the diplomats but not authorized to speak to the media, told NBC News that there was no change in India's position on Taiwan. "We stressed that like the rest of the world, India has a relationship with Taiwan that focuses on economic, technology and cultural ties," the official said. The clarification, which was also reported by Indian news organizations, prompted Beijing to double down, saying it was a "surprise" and "inconsistent with the facts." "It would seem that some people in India have tried to undermine China's sovereignty on the Taiwan question and impede the improvement of China-India relations," Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said. The two countries also have other border disputes as well as a manufacturing rivalry that may only worsen as companies try to shift production from China. China, which is worried about technology transfer, has imposed curbs on the export of rare earth materials to India and recalled some of its nationals working in specialized roles. "The meeting between Modi and Xi will not remove the structural issues between India and China," Tsang said. "But the big issue for Xi outside of China now is U.S. pressure, and making sure India does not appear to be on the U.S. side is therefore significant." "On this occasion, optics does matter," he added.

India looks to mend ties with China as Trump's tariffs push it away from U.S.

India looks to mend ties with China as Trump's tariffs push it away from U.S. HONG KONG —Indiais increasingly important to the United St...
Filipino priest who fought Duterte's brutal drug crackdown among Magsaysay Award winnersNew Foto - Filipino priest who fought Duterte's brutal drug crackdown among Magsaysay Award winners

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A Filipino priest, who publicly protested against then-President Rodrigo Duterte'sbloody crackdownagainst illegal drugs despite death threats and helped provide proper funerals to slain suspects, is among the winners of this year'sRamon Magsaysay Awards— Asia's version of the Nobel Prize. The other winners announced on Sunday were a non-profit foundation in India that worked to bring poor girls to schools in more than 30,000 villages across the South Asian country's most underserved regions and a local Maldives diver who sparked a movement to save her tropical island nation from plastic pollution with massive cleanups and recycling. Named after a popular Philippine president, who died in a 1957 plane crash, they honor "greatness of spirit" through selfless service to people across Asia. The winners will be presented with their awards at the Metropolitan Theatre in Manila on Nov. 7. Rev. Flaviano Antonio Villanueva The priest is a self-confessed drug user who recovered from addiction and was ordained a Catholic priest in 2006. He uses his transformation "to prove that even the most wayward and destitute can find redemption and renewal." In 2015, Villanueva founded the Arnold Janssen Kalinga Center, which provides food, clothing and shelter to thousands in need in the Philippines, including those who may have engaged in drugs and petty crimes, so they may reclaim self-respect, according to the award foundation. Duterte's police-enforced crackdowns on illegal drugs left thousands of mostly poor suspects killed. The reformed priest led efforts to locate their bodies and raised funds for proper cremation and burial. He also put up a memorial shrine for them to ease the plight of widows and orphans. However, his activism led to accusations of sedition under Duterte, a charge that was dropped in 2023, "although the death threats never stopped," the foundation said. "With deep compassion and quiet defiance, he created spaces to rebuild what were unjustly erased by healing the broken, leading home the abandoned and rekindling hope when it seemed all but lost," the foundation said. Duterte's stormy six-year presidency ended in 2022. In March this year, the former presidentwas arrestedon a warrant issued by the International Criminal Court for an alleged crime against humanity over the widespread killings of drug suspects. He has denied authorizing extra-judicial killings. The Foundation Educate Girls Globally The winning Indian non-profit was established in 2007 by Safeena Husain, who returned home after graduating from the London School of Economics and working in the United States to help provideeducation for girlsin rural India by harnessing government and community resources. "Illiterate girls are forced to marry early, have children, and work — while culturally privileged males go to school," the award body said. "Given their limited horizons, only a lifetime of penury and servitude awaits most of these women." Starting in the largest state of Rajasthan, where girls have the highest illiteracy rate, Educate Girls identified the most vulnerable communities, brought unschooled or out-of-school girls into the classroom until they were able to acquire credentials for higher education and employment. From 50 pilot village schools, more than 30,000 villages across India later benefitted from the program, involving over two million girls with a high retention rate, the foundation said. "Educate Girls entered communities where girls and women were expected to stay in the shadows — and made them visible," the foundation said. "They challenged tradition, shifted mindsets and showed that education is not a privilege but a right that reshapes and rebuilds lives." Shaahina Ali attempts to save her home from plastic The third winner grew up in the Maldives and witnessed how the tropical Asian island country, popular among tourists, was threatened by plastic pollution on land and at sea with rapid urbanization. "As a diver, photojournalist and diving instructor, Ali often came literally face to face with the tides of trash clouding up the once-pristine waters of her islands, leaving behind swaths of dead fish and dying corals," the foundation said. In 2015, Ali linked up with a non-government group to start an anti-pollution project and turn waste plastic into a resource for livelihood. Working with volunteers and businesses, her group, Parley Maldives, has undertaken massive cleanups and information and recycling campaigns "that have not only caught much of the physical waste but just as crucially intervened where it matters— in the minds of Maldivians and tourists who now recognize and avoid the problems plastic poses," it said. Ali, 59, has worked with the government also to address climate change and "sparked a marine movement rooted in community, science and resolve." "I go there to clean up with hope — hope that my grandchildren will see whales in the ocean in their lifetime as I did growing up," the foundation cited Ali as saying.

Filipino priest who fought Duterte's brutal drug crackdown among Magsaysay Award winners

Filipino priest who fought Duterte's brutal drug crackdown among Magsaysay Award winners MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A Filipino priest, w...
Are vanity license plates protected speech? One woman is appealing hers to Supreme Court.New Foto - Are vanity license plates protected speech? One woman is appealing hers to Supreme Court.

WASHINGTON – Texas wouldn't let a critic of PresidentDonald Trumphave a customlicense plate reading "JAIL 45." College football fans in Michigan can't request a vanity plate that says "OSUSUCKS." Arizona allowed the religious message"JESUSNM."But Vermontblocked"JN36TN", a reference to the Bible verse John 3:16. States' rules for what is and isn't allowed on personalized plates are often unclear and can amount to a "dizzying array of censorship," lawyers for a Tennessee woman have told the Supreme Court in abidfor the justices to get involved. Leah Gilliam wants the court to find that she is expressing her own views through a vanity plate, not the government's, a decision that would limit states' ability to control that message. The justices came to the opposite conclusion in 2015 whenupholding restrictions on the design of specialty license plates, which support a cause or organization. States that sell specialty plates can prohibit images such as the Confederate flag, the Supreme Court ruled in a5-4 decision. "States have long used license plates in this country to convey government messages," Justice Stephen Breyerwrotefor the majority. But Gilliam's attorneys argue judges have disagreed about whether the same is true for the combination of letters and numbers on personalized license plates. "And intervention is needed promptly, given that a car owner's First Amendment speech rights change when she moves states," they told the Supreme Court. "The same personalized plate that appears on cars in Maryland, Oregon, Delaware, Rhode Island, Kentucky, California and Michigan can be prohibited in Tennessee, Indiana and Hawaii." In Gilliam's case, Tennessee initially approved her request for a personalized license plate that read "69PWNDU." She said the letters referenced "pwnd u," an online gamer phrase meaning to beat an opponent. The numbers, she initially said, reflected part of her phone number and were not a sexual reference. Gilliam later said she's an astronomy buff and "69" refers to the year of the moon landing. But the state received a complaint 11 years after allowing the plate, and later told her it should be revoked because it referred to sexual domination. Gilliam sued, arguing that Tennessee violated her freedom of speech. Tennessee's top courtsaidthe state's restrictions are consistent with theU.S. Supreme Court's 2015 decision inWalker v. Texas Division, Sons of Confederate Veterans. "Although personalized alphanumeric combinations differ from specialty plate designs in some respects, a faithful application of Walker's reasoning compels the conclusion that they are government speech too," the Tennessee Supreme Courtruled. Most of Gilliam's arguments, the court said, are really attacks on how the Supreme Court decided the 2015 case. "Those arguments would be more properly directed to the United States Supreme Court, which is the only court with authority to overrule or abrogate that precedent," the court said. Gilliam filed her appeal in July. Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti declined to comment. In Tennessee, personalized license plate requests are evaluated by a five-person team that reviews between 80 and 100 applications a day, according to court filings. The team consults theUrban Dictionaryfor meanings of less common terms and reviews an internal document of objectionable configurations. Tennessee currently has around 60,000 active personalized plates and has rejected nearly 1,000 since the program began in 1998. Gilliam is not contesting states' rights to ban profane, sexualized or vulgar plates. "With parameters that adequately" restrict "officials' discretion, a state undoubtedly can,"her lawyers wrote. States have limits, they say, because personalized plates don't have the same government imprimatur as specialty plates, which carry "a government-curated slogan in addition to the name of the state" – such as "Keep Texas Beautiful." By contrast, Gilliam's lawyers said, no one thinks license plates reading "IMHIGH," "IMINLUV" or "IMABRAT" are describing the state. "These are messages from car owners," they wrote, "not Tennessee." And unless they're protected as personal speech, a state could – for example − allow plates that support one political party but prohibit others, or promote one religion and not others, Gilliams' lawyers argue. Rhode Island paused its vanity plate program in 2021 afteritunsuccessfully tried to recall a plate from a Tesla owner that said "FKGAS." (The owner, Sean Carroll, said the tag meant "fake gas," but acknowledged that it could be read another way.) The ACLU sued on Carroll's behalf, arguing that the Division of Motor Vehicles had too much leeway to reject requests. A judge issued apreliminary rulingin Carroll's favor and the state is still working onupdating its rules. Gilliam's lawyers make a plausible argument that there's a drastic difference of opinions among judges about vanity plates and that those plates are different from specialty plates, said G.S. Hans, a First Amendment expert at Cornell Law School. But that may not be enough for the justices to get involved, he said. If they do, he said, it might be because they want to weigh in more broadly on the question of when something qualifies as government speech, such as when libraries stock their shelves or officials decide which groups can fly flags on government property. "The court has continued to engage on the government speech question," Hans said, "which is a really complicated and actually quite important and influential question, even if it's being smuggled through license plates and trademarks and flags." The case has attracted the support of several free-speech groups, including the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression and the First Amendment Lawyers Association. In abriefbacking Gilliam's appeal, those groups said the protections government speech enjoy are "catnip for government officials, who have a strong incentive to push its boundaries because it frees them from any burden under the First Amendment." "If allowed to stand," the groups said of the Tennessee Supreme Court's rejection of Gilliam's suit, "the decision will cause constitutional injuries reaching beyond the bumpers of vehicles registered in Tennessee." This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Are vanity plates protected as free speech? Supreme Court may decide.

Are vanity license plates protected speech? One woman is appealing hers to Supreme Court.

Are vanity license plates protected speech? One woman is appealing hers to Supreme Court. WASHINGTON – Texas wouldn't let a critic of Pr...
Generations celebrated weddings, baptisms and first communions at this Minneapolis church before it became a site of tragedyNew Foto - Generations celebrated weddings, baptisms and first communions at this Minneapolis church before it became a site of tragedy

On late-August mornings in the Windom neighborhood, the soundscape is usually familiar and comforting. Cicadas buzz, sparrows dart between yards, neighbors trade easy greetings across tidy sidewalks and the Annunciation Catholic Church's bells peal across southwest Minneapolis, calling parishioners to Mass as they have for more than a century. For generations, the church and its adjoining school have served as Windom's anchor — the site of weddings, baptisms, bake sales, Boy Scout Christmas tree lots and the ever-popular SeptemberFest featuring pie, live music and an outdoor Mass. If you didn't attend Annunciation, someone close to you surely did. That sense of constancy was shattered Wednesday morning when a former student opened fire during the first school Mass of the year, spraying bullets through prismatic stained glass into pews packed with children. In an instant, prayers gave way to panic. Children as young as pre-K ran for cover, dove beneath pews or clutched their classmates as teachers shielded them from the barrage, acting instinctively to protect them. "Our teachers were heroes," Annunciation Catholic School Principal Matt DeBoer said. "Children were ducked down. Adults were protecting children. Older children were protecting younger children." By the time the shooting ended,two children– ages 8 and 10 – were killed. Eighteen others were wounded, including 15 students and three parishioners in their 80s. Police identified the now-deceased shooter as 23-year-oldRobin Westman, a former Annunciation student whose mother once worked at the parish. The violence has left the century-old Catholic institution – long considered a bedrock of faith, family and education – reeling. Generations of alumni and parishioners are now struggling to comprehend how the church that baptized them, married them and educated their children became the site of such devastation. The shooting has devastated families whose lives have been intertwined with Annunciation for generations. For more than a century, the church's bells have marked the rhythm of life here. Generations of families have celebrated first communions under its vaulted ceiling. The accompanying school, opened in 1923, became a place where children grew up surrounded by teachers and classmates who often felt more like extended family. Alumna Maureen Cunniff's parents first fell in love at the school: Her father once slipped her mother a locket in the parking lot when they were middle schoolers. They later married in the church during a blizzard. Cunniff, her twin daughters and her sister all attended Annunciation. Since hearing about the shooting, Cunniff has been crying on and off. "It just was like a huge injury to that sanctity of the community that we've been a part of for so many years," said 48-year-old Cunniff, whose family has ties to Annunciation stretching back seven decades. As news spread, alumni, parents and neighbors streamed to vigils across the city. There were too many people to fit inside one church, said John Kisling, 54, a lifelong member whose daughters recently graduated from the school. "That speaks to how strong the community is and how much people are really there for each other," Kisling said. Michele Faherty, another community member who was baptized at Annunciation and whose father led the school board, said the shooting stripped away a sense of safety: "It's so upsetting to think that we as parents and as human beings can't feel safe in a place where we should feel safe." And Kailee Poling, 27, who attended Annunciation through eighth grade, broke down at a vigil Wednesday night as she clutched her infant daughter, saying "you don't think it's gonna happen in your community." "Being a parent, I just can't imagine what those kids went through," the new mother said through tears. "Annunciation is such a tight-knit community … I was just really impacted knowing that it's so close to home." For Kisling, the shooting touched almost every corner of his life. On Wednesday, he walked the neighborhood with his daughters, checking in on his mother and neighbors. He grew up near Annunciation, attended the school from kindergarten through eighth grade and later sent both his girls there. "We've been a part of this community for 50-some years," he said. "We never, ever had anything like this happen." Annunciation wasn't just a school – it was a lifeline of fundraisers, garage sales, potlucks and parish traditions. Kisling still keeps in touch with friends he made there decades ago. His daughters, Audrey and Riley, are recent alumni who attended mission trips and summer camps run by the school. "Everybody looks out for everybody," Kisling said. "If you need something, somebody's there to help you. And that's few and far between in the way that the world is right now." That sense of trust was shattered Wednesday. The shooting, he said, was "organized, targeted." His younger daughter barely slept that night. "All that I can do is give her a hug and say, 'Everything's going to be OK. This is a one-time thing. It just unfortunately had to be our time,'" he said. But Kisling also voiced a plea: "These assault weapons need to go away … We're lucky that 100 kids didn't lose their lives, and it was only two. But that's still not a number that I'm OK with." "Those little kids had dreams," he said. Even those with looser ties to Annunciation were shaken. The attack had pierced not only the windows of the church but also the foundation of a neighborhood that has long considered Annunciation its anchor. In the hours after the attack, neighbors gathered on sidewalks and near memorials, offering hugs and prayers. Luke Anderson, 20, grew up biking to the church after school from nearby Anthony Middle, shooting hoops behind the church gym. On Wednesday, he pulled a red Radio Flyer wagon stacked with ice water, doughnuts and popsicles for shaken children and families. "It made me feel something to see a kid smile after all of that," he said, eyes welling. Nearby, University of Minnesota student Hudson Grand, 22, stood outside the church with a bouquet of pink daisies in hand. He had come to the neighborhood to visit his grandfather at a nearby care home, but found himself transfixed by the grief emanating from the parish. He stared at the school through tears. "Even though I don't know anyone there, this happens too often. But to have it this close, just really hits home," Grand said. Annunciation Catholic Church, once designated as the safe evacuation site for students during emergencies at the school next door, became a place of loss instead. Annunciation had long prepared for emergencies. The school had drilled children regularly on lockdowns at the school and kept doors secured during the day – measures that officials believe prevented the carnage from escalating further. "A number of the doors had been locked once Mass began, which is part of their normal procedure," Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara said. "We believe that this step also played a part in ensuring this tragedy did not become that much worse." Students' muscle memory from lockdown drills kicked in. Some instinctively ducked, covered their classmates or followed teachers' directions. Audrey Kisling, 16, recalls lockdown drills when she was a student – though she never imagined they would be needed in church. "I was never worried about anything like that," she said. For many, the trauma remains fresh and overwhelming. Vincent Francoual said his11-year-old daughter survived the attackbut is so shaken she doesn't want to return to school or church. "She thought she was going to die," he said. Annunciation now joins a list of schools and churches forever altered by gun violence. The massacre was the 44th school shooting in the US this year, according to aCNN analysis, and one of more than 280 mass shootings nationwide. It comes three years after the killing of 19 children and two teachers inUvalde, Texas, and more than 12 years after the massacre atSandy Hook Elementaryin Newtown, Connecticut. Chaplain Howard Dotson, who helped counsel families in Uvalde after the 2022 school massacre, arrived to comfort parents. "We've had too many of these," he said. "I've seen too many tears. I'm tired of seeing moms lose their children." Outside the church, mourners placed teddy bears, handwritten notes and flowers at a growing memorial for the two children killed. Some are from classmates of the slain children – tiny scrawled messages of farewell to friends they will never see again. One note read: "I'm so sorry, it wasn't fair. R.I.P." The parish has not yet announced when classes will resume, and children have already lost treasured traditions like spirit day and the butterfly release. The church doors are temporarily closed for parishioners, preventing them from hearing the sounds of hymns and children's voices that normally fill the sanctuary. For now, Mass will be held in the auditorium of the school. Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz has ordered additional state patrol officers to help safeguard schools and places of worship. But as grief ripples through the community, neighbors are clinging to one another for comfort. "I was walking around the neighborhood with my dog, and I got neighbors stopping, hugging us," Francoual said. Though the tragedy has left scars that may never fully heal, parishioners say the bonds of their tight-knit community will not be broken. "We won't allow this evil act to take away from the value and the power of community that is what brings everyone back together to heal," Cunniff said. The Windom neighborhood still hums with late-August cicadas and sparrows, the sounds of summer carrying on as always. But now, the church bells ring with a different weight, marking grief alongside faith. For the families of Annunciation, the community remains strong – but it will never be the same. CNN's Alicia Wallace and Arit John reported from Minneapolis, and Dalia Faheid reported from Los Angeles. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Generations celebrated weddings, baptisms and first communions at this Minneapolis church before it became a site of tragedy

Generations celebrated weddings, baptisms and first communions at this Minneapolis church before it became a site of tragedy On late-August ...

 

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