Excerpt from the Jamaica Observer column published Monday, April 26, 2021
By Jean Lowrie-Chin
It mattered. It mattered to everyone who cares about this family called humanity. And so, on the afternoon of Tuesday, April 20, the world stopped to listen for the verdict in the trial of Derek Chauvin, the monster who knelt on the neck of George Floyd for over nine minutes, even as he pleaded that he could not breathe, even after it was found that he had no pulse.
“Believe your eyes,” the prosecution had urged the jurors in their closing statement. They had to, thanks to 17-year-old Darnella Frazier who videotaped the cold-blooded actions of Chauvin. This is an incredibly special young lady because 10 minutes is a long time for a teenager’s busy fingers to remain still. From the witness stand she said, “When I look at George Floyd, I look at my dad, my brothers, my cousins, my uncles, because they are all black. I look at how that could have been one of them.” She told the court that she had many sleepless nights, feeling guilty that she should have done more to save Floyd’s life. She should know that any attempt on her part may very well have resulted in two murders.
It was Darnella’s video that got people of every colour and creed marching for justice all over the world. Yes, we had read and seen the news reports of previous police excesses, but this scene with Chauvin staring boldly at the video, hand in pocket while he squeezed the life out of George Floyd was a dagger in the heart of humanity.
When the jury retired to deliberate, social media comments reflected the tension of the people and of the state. In Minnesota, office buildings and stores were battened down. When it was announced that the jury had arrived at a verdict people flooded squares all over America. At the George Floyd Square, the scene of his death renamed in his honour, people arrived with flowers and waited anxiously.
The announcement brought tears of joy and celebration. Like so many Jamaican families, our family’s WhatsApp group was on the watch too. We worry about our relatives living in the US and so we were all invested in the results of this trial. We cried and called each other in relief. Yes, the evidence was clear, but in too many instances justice had not been served.
On Twitter, Darnella posted: “I just cried so hard. This last hour my heart was beating so fast, I was so anxious, anxiety bussing through the roof. But to know guilty on all 3 charges!!! Thank you God, thank you, thank you, thank you. George Floyd, we did it!! Justice has been served.”
Earl Moxam discussed the case with Francois St Juste the following day, and he reminded Jamaicans who were planning to migrate to the US that once they stepped off the plane their children would be in a different environment, one in which their race would differentiate them.
Well, do I remember the detailed planning that went into our son’s trip to his cousin’s graduation. He had to take the Knutsford Express to Montego Bay so he would have only one flight to my sister. Then they would fly together to his cousin. Growing up in Jamaica his experiences were, largely, friendly and easy-going. Sadly, children of colour in the US are given ‘the talk’ by their parents from a very early age. The stress on those poor little hearts is really a sad indictment on the racists that continue to pollute that great country with their narrow-minded stupidity. Let us hope that the worldwide reaction to the murder of George Floyd and the sound verdict of the jury will herald a new day for people of colour in America. Of note, American Asians have been under attack as well. We can navigate an instrument on Mars, now we need to navigate a better path to justice on Planet Earth.