make-money-468x60
make-money-468x60

Friday, 5 December 2014

What protests say about race in America?

Police make an arrest as protesters march through Midtown Manhattan early Friday, December 5, in the wake of a Staten Island grand jury's decision not to indict a police officer who used a chokehold in the death of Eric Garner. The grand jury on Wednesday, December 3, declined to indict New York police Officer Daniel Pantaleo in Garner's death in July. Demonstrators took to the streets to express outrage in New York and across the country, including Chicago, Boston and Washington.On a chilly morning after thousands took to the streets to protest yet another grand jury's refusal to indict a white police officer for killing an unarmed black man, tourists vied for spots on the Staten Island Ferry to photograph the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island.
The ferry is the only way to get from lower Manhattan -- without a car, of course -- to the north shore of New York's least populated and whitest borough.
On the other side of the harbor, just blocks from the ferry terminal, is Tompkinsville, the neighborhood where Eric Garner lived and died.
Garner, 43, was a father of six and a grandfather. He died July 17 after police Officer Daniel Pantaleo tackled him to the ground in a department-banned chokehold during an arrest for selling cigarettes illegally.
Garner's death occurred weeks before Ferguson, Missouri, Police Officer Darren Wilson shot unarmed teenager Michael Brown to death on August 9. A St. Louis County grand jury last week declined to indict Wilson, setting off days of unrest.
On the journey from Manhattan, where hordes of protesters stopped traffic on Wednesday and Thursday, to the Staten Island street where Garner was killed, people were asked three questions.
What do the deaths of Brown and Garner say about race in America? How would your life be different if you were of a different race or class? Do you believe justice is colorblind?
Enoch Karim and his daughter Takeya sat on the Staten Island-bound ferry, watching tourists snap photos of the Statue of Liberty. The United States is not all it's made out to be, Karim said. The grand jury decision to not indict Pantaleo was not unexpected.
"We've become desensitized to these murders," said Karim, whose son was friends with Garner, known in the neighborhood as "Big E." "It's business as usual in America."
"It's bad," his 14-year-old daughter said. "We die and they don't do anything about it."
Karim said his son and Garner sold "loosie" cigarettes to make a few dollars "instead of stealing." His son saw Garner die, he said.
"He said, 'Dad, I had to walk away. They killed Big E and I couldn't do anything about it.' "
Asked if life would be different if his race was different, Karim smiled. "It's called the privileged race," he said. "I'd probably be president."
Johannes Morken and his wife, May, on Wednesday stood near Rockefeller Center in Manhattan. They watched hundreds of protesters on the streets. On Thursday, waiting for the ferry, the couple visiting from Norway read a front-page newspaper article about the protests.
"Both these two guys are black and they were killed for small crimes," said Johannes Morken. "Police use tough measures against unarmed black people. It looks like white policemen are trained to act like that."
"Racism is more of a problem than we hoped it would be," he added.


0 comments:

Post a Comment

make-money-468x60-2