Sunday, August 30, 2020

Monday Murals: Black Lives Taken Too Soon


It's time once again to join Sami at Sami's Colourful World and her Monday Murals.  Even though it's still Sunday in my world, please be aware that Sami's mural link goes live at 11:01 a.m. my time today.

My foodie friend Sally told me about this mural.  She immediately thought of me and told me where to find it.  As soon as I saw it, I was nearly overwhelmed.  It is quite appropriate because on Friday (August 27), we celebrated the 57th Annual March on Washington.  Although the National Park Service, which granted a permit for up to 50,000 participants, did not “require nor enforce” the use of social distancing and masks, Al Sharpton, who organized the event said they required all attendees to wear masks and social distance wherever possible.  Each person received a temperature check and was given a small bottle of hand sanitizer, too.  Many of the families depicted in this mural spoke during the March on Washington on Friday, too.

Breonna Taylor was a beautiful 26-year-old African-American emergency medical technician

who was fatally shot by Louisville police

issuing a no-knock warrant.  

The dove of peace flew to the next person who died too soon.

Trayvon Martin, an unarmed 17 year old was walking home from a convenience store when he was spotted by a neighborhood-watch volunteer

who followed him and shot him because Martin "appeared" to be on drugs or might have been a burglar.   Once Martin died, the murderer was released because it's legal in Florida to use deadly force in self-defense.

Later charged with the offense, the offender was sadly acquitted and is now free, while Trayvon Martin is still dead!

Emmett Till was only 14 years old when he was brutally beaten, had one eye gouged out, and lynched for supposedly speaking to a white woman in a grocery store in Mississippi while visiting his uncle, a sharecropper.   After the lynching, the kidnappers threw his body in the river, where he was later found.  The all white male jury acquitted the two suspects in the case.

Till's casket was returned to his Chicago birthplace, where his mother insisted on an open casket funeral so everyone could see what had been done to him.  Till's death and the subsequent photos that were shown in various magazines may have, some believe, sparked the Civil Rights Movement.  It was 65 years ago on Friday (August 28) that Till was murdered.

This mural has been at this site for nearly two years, from what I could learn.  It was painted long before George Floyd was murdered, which inspired the Black Lives Matter Movement, and before last Sunday (August 23) when Jacob Blake was shot seven times, three of which hit his back, by a police officer who was not wearing a body cam.  Blake is currently paralyzed and up until Friday was cuffed/shackled to a hospital bed because he was accused of a felony.  Now those charges appear to have been dropped.  This incident occurred in front of Blake's three sons, one of whom was celebrating his birthday, who witnessed the event from the back seat of their SUV.

This mural is found in a strip mall located at 13th and Hillside in Wichita, Kansas (USA).

If you enjoy murals from around the world, please don't forget to visit Monday Murals at Sami's Colourful World.  And PLEASE, if you plan to protest anywhere in the world, do so PEACEFULLY!!  The mothers of all these who have died are asking for that, too.


25 thoughtful remarks:

craftytrog said...

That's an amazing mural, and it's shocking that these injustices are still happening in the 21st century! Thanks for sharing this Elizabeth.
Alison xx

Valerie-Jael said...

Wonderful mural, it is awful that these things are still happening and that the officers involved are not punished. And it saddens me when I read racist commentaries on blogs, I wish it could be stopped. Have a great day, Valerie

Iris Flavia said...

It plain hurts to read this. I fail to understand. I reckon it´s 1-2% of police officers who do this? Oh, boy.
My first thought was, how can you go at people because of their dark skin colour, but, well, here it´s the other way round.
And I kid you not.
When will everybody learn the color does not matter, it´s the people´s minds, their wrong behavior?

(PS... LOL, I know no one who does not know what MIT stands for 😂 and weee, my respect, too! I only went to a no name uni, but... does Germany have something similar at all?)

aussie aNNie said...

Racsist is ripe everwhere and I hate it... your post is interesting and we get jailed if deadly force is used here, not good in this time of our lives and world....think it would be different. Great art post here though...xx

Let's Art Journal said...

What an amazing mural and a lovely tribute! Very poignant, it's hard to believe things like this happen - so unjust and sad! Thanks for sharing! Hugs, Jo x

Mia said...

Stunning mural for a serious social phenomenon. I do not talk politics in the blogland, but racism -as every type of hate and oppression- is unacceptable. People of every race, tribe, ethnicity etc ARE OR SHOULD BE equal. Kisses, my dear friend.

nwilliams6 said...

We have so many mountains in life. I wonder if we will ever learn to help each other over them instead of creating them....I feel we are so flawed fundamentally that we never will. I hope people are waking up to the injustice but fear that may be expecting too much for some....

Lovely mural and words. Hugz

Barbara said...

I would have been overwhelmed by this mural too.

CJ Kennedy said...

Just overwhelming sadness looking at the mural and hearing the stories. So much potential. So much lost. So much time has past from the Civil Rights movements of the 1960s. You think we would have made so much progress in that time. So much time lost.

DVArtist said...

I can't even think of all the hate in this country. A very powerful mural and post.

Divers and Sundry said...

Powerful. We need fundamental change as Biden recognizes and not a blind fealty to institutional police officers. Fundamental Change!

Mae Travels said...

Thank you for the very well-stated summary of one of the many ills of our suffering society. Having the police be trigger=happy judge, slap-dash jury, and willing executioners is a nightmare for all of us no matter what our skin color. Now Trump is going to intervene by visiting Kenosha, meaning stir up more evils.

be safe... mae at maefood.blogspot.com

Jim said...

It's well done.

My name is Erika. said...

This is a fabulous tribute to lives needlessly lost. It is beautifully done, and thank goodness Sally told you about it so we can all see it. I was quite disturbed today, not because of the March in Washington, but because I saw on the news about Trump supporters causing issues at at least 1 peaceful protest. And then the president saying these people were doing good things. Of course, as you know, these marches all began due to Black lives lost needlessly and now these hooligans are only stirring things up even more with a racist president's support. This makes murals like this even more necessary. Thanks for sharing. Hugs-Erika

Rita said...

A beautiful, touching, profound mural! :)

Teresa said...

A great mural 👍🏼

Bertiebo said...

A sign of change. And hope, I hope

s.c said...

A great and touching mural indeed. Too bad we still need to be reminded of it.

Meggymay said...

An amazing mural, we live in troubled times, this post will touch many of us from all our home countries spread across the world.
Its time to change everywhere.
Yvonne xx

Sami said...

What a powerful mural Elizabeth! I had tears in my eyes just reading about these injustices and how so many years later it's still happening. How very sad...
I'm happy Sally told you about this mural, thanks for sharing and for participating in Monday Murals.

Jackie McGuinness said...

Disgusting, disturbing stories. Imagine how many more there are that never got caught on camera.

We have murals for some of these people too, here in Toronto.

The mural should remain for all time as a memorial to these poor folks.

da tabbies o trout towne said...

while this mural is a beautiful tribute to Breonna; Trayvon and Emmett; it should never have had to have been created in the first place; love to each of you and your families ♥♥♥

Jeanie said...

This mural is really powerful, Elizabeth. And beautifully done. It's a splendid tribute but oh, so sad we need that tribute.

Linda said...

So much tragedy. When will we learn?

dee Nambiar said...

This mural is a wonderful tribute to those lives lost. It's nice to see people all over the world keeping this fight going strong. Let's hope all this inequality will be behind us, soon.

Hope you are having a good week, Elizabeth.
Take care.