A little more than five years ago, Guadalupe Galeno-Hernandez was a south Minneapolis 13-year-old fighting for her life after a gangster's bullet pierced her neck. Now a budding poet who dreams of teaching elementary schoolchildren, on Tuesday night she joined classmates at their high school graduation.
Guadalupe, who will become the first child in her family to finish high school, joined 405 others from Minneapolis South High School for the graduation ceremony at Mariucci Arena.
Sitting at home before the ceremony, her eyes on the mortarboard and gown still wrapped in plastic that she would soon put on, Guadalupe said she had one feeling above all else: "I'm nervous!"
Big crowds aren't her thing, she said, but she made a commitment to go to the ceremony for her mother, Hilda, who's deeply proud of her daughter.
From the first night in the emergency room after Guadalupe was shot until today, the two have faced Guadalupe's injuries together. They continue to do physical therapy at home, with Hilda working on Guadalupe's hands and legs. With her mother's help, Guadalupe can stand.
"She's blossomed so much through the years," said special education assistant Talitha Nelson, who has known Guadalupe for four years at South. "She was so shy and timid when she first started. Today she's so outgoing and such an advocate for herself. She's so blunt and honest. And I love that."
Shooting and recovery
On Nov. 12, 2010, Guadalupe walked to the grocery store with her brothers, a sister-in-law and other relatives. They were almost back home to her aunt's house on the corner of E. 34th Street and Chicago Avenue S. when a car pulled up. A 17-year-old boy stood up through the sunroof and shouted a gang slogan before firing indiscriminately at Guadalupe's family, whom he mistook for gang members. A person inside the car later told police that they had no idea the boy would shoot at anyone, and were angry at him.
The bullet sliced through Guadalupe's throat and lodged in her spine. She was paralyzed from the waist down.