George Floyd's family pays emotional tribute as crowds flock to funeral
George Floyd’s life was celebrated at his funeral on
Tuesday, with eulogies that honored him as a father, brother, athlete and
mentor whose death sparked a global reckoning over police brutality and racial
prejudice.
Crowds descended on a church in Houston, Texas,
after Floyd’s body was returned to his childhood hometown to be laid to rest in
a cemetery in suburban Pearland next to his mother, whom he called out for as
he lay dying with a police officer’s knee on his neck in May.
“Third Ward,
Cuney Homes, that’s where he was born at,” Floyd’s brother Rodney told mourners
at the Fountain of Praise church, on the sixth day of mourning for Floyd in
three cities. “But everybody is going to remember him around the world. He is
going to change the world.”
Radio stations observed moments of silence. City
officials paid tribute on social media. In New York, traders at the stock
exchange paused for eight minutes and 46 seconds to mark the length of time the
Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was filmed kneeling on Floyd,
impervious to the man’s pleas for breath and mercy.
Since he was killed on 25 May, millions around the
world have watched video footage of Floyd’s death taken by a witness on the
sidewalk and listened to the 46-year-old struggling to say “I can’t breathe”.
Brooke Williams, Floyd’s niece, delivered an
emotional tribute describing her uncle as “spiritually grounded, an activist”
who “moved people with his words”.
“My name is Brooke Williams, George Floyd’s niece,
and I can breathe,” she began. “[As] long as I’m breathing, justice will be
served.”
“Lives like
George will not matter until somebody pays the cost for taking their lives,”
said the civil rights advocate the Rev Al Sharpton in his eulogy. Celebrating
the passion of the mass protests, he added: “All over the world I’ve seen
grandchildren of slave masters tearing down slave master statues.”
Outside the church, dozens gathered to honor their
fellow Houstonian, wearing shirts reading “I can’t breathe” and “Black Lives
Matter”.
“The way his life was taken, he wasn’t able to go
through due process,” said Savant Moore, 35. “We have to stand together to make
sure that doesn’t happen again.”
Ben Crump, the civil rights attorney representing
Floyd’s family, had earlier led a press conference with families of other
victims of violent policing: Pamela Turner in Texas, Trayvon Martin in Florida,
Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia, Eric Garner in New York, Botham Jean in Texas, and
Michael Brown in Missouri: a few representing many more.
“George Floyd’s life mattered, and black lives
matter,” Crump said.
Protesters have claimed some victories – charges for
all four now former officers at the scene of Floyd’s killing, and a high bail
for Chauvin, the officer who kneeled on his neck. The case is seen by many as
the tipping point for an unjust system waiting to be tipped.
Alongside Floyd’s name, demonstrators in cities
across the country shouted the names of their own who had been killed by law
enforcement officers, the overwhelming majority of whom kept their jobs and
never faced criminal charges. The officers who shot and killed 26-year-old
Breonna Taylor as she slept in her Louisville, Kentucky, apartment in March
have not been charged.
The weeks of unrest devolved into instances of
looting and destruction on the fringes that prompted some jurisdictions to
impose unprecedented curfews and call in the national guard for support. But
the protesters coast to coast have been mostly peaceful.
Like Floyd’s killing, instances of use of force by
police at these protests were captured on video. Officers filmed assaulting
protesters were charged. Calls to defund police departments have led to some
action by local leaders around the country, a change from recent history. In
Minneapolis, the city council secured a veto-proof majority in favor of
dismantling the entire troubled police force.
Among the line of buses and cars at the front of the
church, Savant Moore shared a sentiment he posted on Facebook in the aftermath
of the killing: “It really took a global pandemic with no sports, no concerts,
no vacations to get the world to sit down and have no choice but to watch
what’s really happening to black people in America with zero distractions.”
Moore was an army ranger who had been deployed four
times, once in Afghanistan and another time in Iraq. But he said it was here in
his home country that he was scared. “I have a college degree from Howard
University. I’m an entrepreneur. And this is my America. Every day, I still
have to worry about whether people will not like me because of the color of my
skin, or if I might not make it back home to my children because I encounter a
police officer for a routine traffic stop.”
Joe Biden, Donald Trump’s Democratic opponent in
November’s election, visited Floyd’s family on Monday and delivered a remote
message at the funeral, calling for change.
“Today, now, is the time, the purpose, the season to
listen and heal,” Biden said. “Now is the time for racial justice. That’s the
answer we must give to our children when they ask why. Because when there is
justice for George Floyd, we will truly be on our way to racial justice in
America.”
Tuesday’s funeral service was for family and friends
only, but Tamecia Dogbe, 41, still drove two and a half hours from Austin with
her sister and 12-year-old niece to stand outside the church in the sweltering
heat and humidity.
“It feels like a part of history, something I want
my niece to witness,” she said. “Ten years from now, she might be able to see
this in a history book.”
She can only pray that in 10 years, these sort of
funerals – services for victims of police killings – will be a thing of the
past as well.
Floyd’s golden casket was taken by horse-drawn
carriage to the cemetery, where he was interred next to his mother.
Officials shut down the roads from the church to the
cemetery, including a section of major toll road, to make way for the
procession. Along the route, groups of supporters waved “Black Lives Matter”
signs and cheered for Floyd.
About a mile from the cemetery entrance, hundreds
lined the streets, holding up umbrellas and makeshift tents to protect
themselves from the unrelenting sun. They doodled chalk messages of “rest in
power” and “be the change” along the sidewalk, and periodically broke out in
chants: “Say his name! George Floyd!”
Rodney and Philonise Floyd cheer to the crowd as
they arrive at the Houston Memorial Gardens cemetery in Pearland.
Herman Bell, 37, was on his way with his family to
the eye doctor when he decided to stop to watch the procession. “We lost a
great man from the Third Ward,” Bell said.
“I want my kids to understand that when they go to
school, they need to go to school and better themselves,” he said. “This man
went out and bettered the world.”
There was a sense in Houston that in times like
these, people come out to support the family even if they didn’t know them.
Schon Carter, 40, came out on Tuesday to show not just her support for the
family, but to show that “we’re all standing in one accord”.
“It feels good that despite the heat, the weather,
that people actually took the time out to show their respect for the family,”
Carter said.
The last few weeks have been “mind-opening” for her,
she said. “I don’t know what to expect for the future, but it’s definitely time
for a change.”




