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your knee off our necks’your knee off our necks’, says Rev Al Sharptonyour knee off our necks’, says Rev Al Sharpton, says Rev Al Sharpton

your knee off our necks’, says Rev Al Sharpton

It’s time to stand up and say, ‘Get your knee off our necks’, says Rev Al Sharpton

Abdul Gani New Delhi Published 05.06.20, 08:39 PM
George Floyd's casket carried to a hearse after a memorial service for Floyd at North Central University on Thursday, June 4, in Minneapolisyoffffffffffffur knee off our necks’, says Rev Al Sharpton

George Floyd's casket carried to a hearse after a memorial service for Floyd at North Central University on Thursday, June 4, in Minneapolisyoffffffffffffur knee off our necks’, says Rev Al Sharpton (AP)1

Hundreds of people filed into a Minneapolis chapel on Thursday to remember George Floyd, the man whose death at the hands of the police opened a nationwide flood of anguish, protest and demands for change in American policing.

By turns sombre and defiant, the mourners celebrated Floyd as a friend and father and uncle to those closest to him, but also as a victim of racial injustice whose killing had drawn a legion of people to the streets.

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“George Floyd’s story has been the story of black folks,” the Rev Al Sharpton said in a eulogy of Floyd, who died after a white police officer held him down on a Minneapolis street with a knee to Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes. “Because ever since 401 years ago, the reason we could never be who we wanted and dreamed of being is you kept your knee on our neck.”

The gathering, the first of several memorials for Floyd in different cities in the coming days, drew Floyd’s family members, political leaders, civil rights leaders and celebrities — many in masks out of concern for the coronavirus.

“We were smarter than the underfunded schools you put us in,” Sharpton said. “But you had your knee on our neck. We could run corporations and not hustle in the streets, but you had your knee on our neck. We had creative skills, we could do whatever anybody else could do. But we couldn’t get your knee off our neck.”

“It’s time to stand up and say, ‘Get your knee off our necks,’” Sharpton went on, as raucous applause broke out in the university sanctuary where Floyd’s body rested inside a closed, shiny copper coffin.

All the while, marches were taking place around the country on Thursday, as thousands of people in cities far from Minneapolis poured into parks and streets calling for an end to systemic racism in the justice system on a 10th day of protests. Demonstrators marched in cities including New York, Nashville, Seattle and Santa Monica, Calif. And around the country, people watched the eulogy to Floyd on television and online.

The two-hour service served as a call for activism after more than a week of upheaval prompted by the video of the police officer kneeling on Floyd’s neck as he lay face down and handcuffed on the pavement, saying “I can’t breathe.”

In a service punctuated by gospel music, Floyd’s relatives told personal stories, of the man they knew as Perry, and whom people in the neighbourhood had called “Big Floyd”. He had a gift at making people feel welcome. His brother Philonise Floyd called him a “general”, someone who always had a line of friends behind him.

“Everywhere you go and see people, how they cling to him. They wanted to be around him,” he said.

“Being in the house with my brother, it was inspiring,” he added, “because my mom used to take in other kids, and they were George’s friends.”

He recalled sharing a bed with his big brother. Together, they played football and ate banana-and-mayonnaise sandwiches and used an oven to dry their socks.

One of his cousins, Shareeduh Tate, said, “The thing I miss most about him is his hugs. He was just this big giant.”

A mural above the dais of the Frank J. Lindquist Sanctuary at North Central University depicted Floyd’s face above the words “Now I can breathe.”

An usher stood watch over the coffin, which was surrounded by white sprays of flowers.

The death of Floyd, 46, on May 25 in front of a corner market called Cup Foods in Minneapolis, has galvanised a nation, with protesters pouring into the streets in cities and small towns alike, as well as across the world.

New York Times News Service

One of his cousins, Shareeduh Tate, said, “The thing I miss most about him is his hugs. He was just this big giant.”

One of his cousins, Shareeduh Tate, said, “The thing I miss most about him is his hugs. He was just this big giant.” TESdttttttt

He recalled sharing a bed with his big brother. Together, they played football and ate banana-and-mayonnaise sandwiches and used an oven to dry their socks.

One of his cousins, Shareeduh Tate, said, “The thing I miss most about him is his hugs. He was just this big giant.”

A mural above the dais of the Frank J. Lindquist Sanctuary at North Central University depicted Floyd’s face above the words “Now I can breathe.”

An usher stood watch over the coffin, which was surrounded by white sprays of flowers.

The death of Floyd, 46, on May 25 in front of a corner market called Cup Foods in Minneapolis, has galvanised a nation, with protesters pouring into the streets in cities and small towns alike, as well as across the world.

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