Seattle after George Floyd Murder: Protest, Anger, Marches, Occupation
We have had a 180 turn in mood in the last two weeks, as a result of the murder of George Floyd. I am now seeing the anger about racism and police violence leading to demands to defund the police, whereas before we were “all in this together” to stay home ( which of course also laid bare racism, as privileged people, predominantly white, stayed home, and people of color went to work for minimum wage and risked their lives.) Even as we march, more black men are murdered. Here is the most recent Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta. We can see on the video the terrible training , the excess arms, the hostility .
Huge amounts of new visual imagery has emerged in the streets and on the walls of Seattle some of it actually on top of Covid murals documented in my three previous posts. The city has turned inside out.. Art and personal expressions are everywhere, not confined to galleries or trained practitioners.
We have had enormous protest marches almost daily. Many of them have been to and from downtown, well covered in the Seattle Times. Here is one excellent article by Naomi Ishisaka whom I saw at the “We Want to Live” March right after she had this front page story. Naomi is normally a once a week columnist on Monday. I asked her if she was paid triple for this two page article and she said no. ( Is that discrimination at the Times?).
I have been to two of the protests, “We Want to Live” on June 7 starting in Othello Park and the “March of Silence” on June 12 starting in Judkins Park. The first one was very large, with lots of families, all ages, ethnicities, the second one was huge, in the pouring rain, and perhaps fewer families because the next day was a march for children which unfortunately I missed. I took lots of photographs of the marchers. The most moving event for me was standing in silence for 8 minutes and 46 seconds. It was an incredibly long time. Incomprehensible, tragic, heartbreaking.
But also moving was when the entire crowd of thousands began to move in absolute silence. It was a river of silent bodies.
I will first focus on the two marches for imagery. In the next posts, I will talk about the amazing International District murals and the transformation of Capital Hill to the “Capital Hill Occupied Protest”
The “We Want to Live March” had small posters with that mantra that could be filled in with a person’s name, as well as photographs of many people killed by the police.
When I first arrived I saw this sign. It is so moving. It was one of the repeated statements of the march. It matched the larger theme focusing on youth.”We want to Live”
There were definitely over a thousand people there and many different signs, but the emphasis was on “we Want to Live”. Youth led the march holding a huge banner with the statement “We Want to Live”. I was looking for intersections of all the racial groups. “Black Lives Matters” encompasses all people of color. Here is an image sponsored by La Resistencia for example. The detention system was breeding despair and destruction of families before the pandemic, now it is killing people. Call Inslee to shut down the detention center and free all the detainees. THey are not criminals. Follow the link for instructions.
Latinos for Black Lives in the March.
Black Lives Matter Native American Drummers. Hopefully I will learn how to post my video of this.
Pasifika for Black Lives
And families with children
“Why Do You See Me as a Crime?”
I am sorry I cut off the slogan held by the young man kneeling, but you know what it says.
And then there were many many other people who care enough to create this long people’s outpouring of words protesting police violence
The second march I went to was the “March of Silence”, already described above.Organized by Black Lives Matter King County, it was much larger than the “We want to Live March,” because it was on the day of the national strike June 12th. I will post a few images from it. It is not possible to convey how moving it was to stand in a crowd of thousands who were all silent both during the moments honoring George Floyd’s death and in the march itself.
South Asians for Black Lives
And it was pouring rain which seemed so appropriate to our silence in honor of all of these people brutalized and killed by the police.
This final image is actually from the Capital Hill Occupied Protest, but it gives names and ages and some of the people who have been murdered. Since “Say their Names” is one of the signs repeated on every march, I include it here. This is the only sign I saw with the ages of the people killed. At the top is Charleena Lyles, killed in Seattle in her apartment, mother of four.
Below are the names and ages of George FLoyd age 46, Breanna Taylor age 26, Ahmad Aubrey, 25 Eric Garner 43,Michael Brown 18, Tamir Rice 12, Freddie Gray 25, Philando Castille 32, Stephen Clark 25, Trayvon Martin 17, Manuelle Ellis 33, Charlene Lyles 30
This entry was posted on June 17, 2020 and is filed under Uncategorized.