Eric Freibrun still cannot believe a mass shooting took place in his community. He was there, taking pictures of his son marching with the band just as the shots rang out.
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"I heard the gunfire," he said. "We were maybe 50 feet 75 feet west of where things appeared to be happening. I didn't recognize it as gunfire. I thought, 'No, this cannot be, not here.'"
Stories like Freibrun's permeate throughout the community. Everyone seems to know someone effected by the tragedy.
Noah Reich and his partner, David, are connected to the tragedy in a different way.
They traveled to the Chicago suburb from L.A. to build altars for the seven victims. They started this practice after the Pulse Nightclub shooting.
"We were in Buffalo where we honored the 10 victims that were lost at the Tops on Jefferson, and while we were there is actually when we found out the news about what had taken place in Uvalde," Reich said. "So we traveled to Uvalde, where we worked to create 22 altars to honor the 19 children and two teachers lost there."
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Then they heard about the Fourth of July parade shooting, jumped on a plane and built an altars for each of the victims.
"If we're not going to do anything to stop these tragedies, how do we make sure we are honoring and remembering each and every life we are losing along the way?" Reich said.
The entire community is coming together to support each other. Residents have been placing flowers at another growing memorial and even dropping off food and gift cards to the police and fire departments as a way to say thank you.
"Highland Parkers love to help and to give back," resident Elise Frost said.