The families came from all over the country to honor George Floyd. They all had one tragic thing in common: Their loved ones' names became synonymous with a movement only because of their deaths.
It is a fraternity, they said, of which no one wants to be a part.
On the dais at the downtown Minneapolis hotel Monday was the mother of Oscar Grant (killed in 2009 by transit police in the Bay Area). Next to her was the mother of Eric Garner (killed by a New York police officer in 2014), who was seated next to the mother of Trayvon Martin (killed by a neighborhood watch coordinator in 2012). A few seats down was the mother of Daunte Wright (killed by a Brooklyn Center police officer last month).
On the dais and in the audience for the panel discussion were even more: Family members of Jacob Blake, and Breonna Taylor, and Alvin Cole, and Botham Jean, and Corey Jones. The names have provided momentum for a movement toward police accountability and racial justice that has become more pronounced in the year since Floyd's killing by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin.
One year after Floyd's death and one month after Chauvin's murder conviction, these families implored Minnesotans and Americans to take last year's moment that erupted into nationwide protests and turn it into a sustaining movement to effect lasting change in courtrooms, legislative chambers and media. The "From Protest to Policy" panel discussion, moderated by civil rights activist DeRay Mckesson and livestreamed on Facebook, was part of the George Floyd Memorial Foundation's Inaugural Remembrance.
"We represent so many other families," said Sybrina Fulton, the mother of Trayvon Martin. "Continue to support them; don't just support them when it just happened. ... A lot of people talk way too much for me. They talk a lot. But guess what? The action is what's important. If you want to be a community activist, then you need to act. Posting it on your social media, that's one thing. But the real work is in your actions."
Many police officers and their supporters have decried Chauvin's actions as ruthless and lawless, a bad apple who unfairly stained the law enforcement profession.
But this group of families spoke of a rotten system. They wanted the one-year remembrance of Floyd's death to serve as a reminder for systemic reform.