Thirty-three years on, a man has been arrested for the murder of six-year-old Etan. But America is still reeling from that abduction.by Nancy McDermott
On 25 May 1979, a
six-year-old boy named Etan Patz went missing on his first solo journey to
school. Last week, almost 33 years to the day, New York police announced the
arrest of Pedro Hernandez for Etan’s murder.
New Yorkers are greeting the news cautiously and with
something like bewilderment. We’ve been down this road before. Thirty-three
years of false leads and wild speculation have rendered this event so much
larger than life. The disappearance of Etan haunted a generation. This was the
story that changed everything. It was the abduction that came to define
childhood in the years to follow. It seems almost impossible to imagine that it
could, finally, be over.
It’s still possible to visit the corner of Prince and
Broom where Etan disappeared so many years ago. Today the area is gentrified,
with restaurants and expensive boutiques; barely a trace remains of the New
York of the 1970s. Looking at the city today, it’s hard to imagine how
different things were then, before its rise to become the de facto financial centre of the world.
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