Khader Safi was sitting outside an open door to his tobacco shop on University Avenue in St. Paul on Friday afternoon, a gun holstered to his hip.
He'd had three hours of sleep the night before, as looters broke windows and tried to set the building afire. Armed with weapons and fire extinguishers, Safi and seven family members were able to ward off complete devastation as protests over the death of George Floyd in police custody turned violent.
"I feel so sad," Safi said, as he planned another sleepless night defending his store. "It was an experience I never expected to happen to our neighborhood."
In small retail nodes and busy stretches of commerce, neighbors and shop owners across Minnesota reeled from the devastation brought on their lives and livelihoods after a second night of unrest. The bulk of the destruction continued to be in the area around Lake Street in Minneapolis and central St. Paul. Hundreds of businesses Wednesday and Thursday had been damaged.
As fire trucks sprayed smoldering buildings and backhoes pulled away charred rubble on Friday, the sound of drills echoed down streets as businesses rushed to board up windows in anticipation of another fiery night.
"Part of you doesn't want to do it because of the fear message it sends," said Joe Hughes, who owns a building used by five small businesses at the corner of Selby and Snelling avenues in St. Paul. "But some of the business owners wanted us to do it. I am praying for justice and I am praying for peace."
Target CEO Brian Cornell said Friday the retailer, which calls Minneapolis home, hopes to have the Lake Street location destroyed by looters open again by the end of the year.
Cornell said Target had not yet assessed the damage and said the company would redo other damaged stores as well.