Exactly a month after Trayvon Martin was killed, his family gathered
in a muggy back room at the civic center in Sanford, Florida. The city
council was preparing for its first public meeting since the boy's
death, and his family and their supporters wanted to pressure city
leaders to step up and arrest the man who had fatally shot Martin.
Outside of the civic center a crowd of thousands
began to swell, chanting so loudly that at times it felt like a train
was rumbling in the near distance. For weeks, momentum had been building
around the call for justice for Martin, the 17-year-old whose life was
taken by George Zimmerman, then a neighborhood watch volunteer.
But inside the room that evening, away from the
cameras, away from the hounding media and the emotional protests
whipping up just yards away, there was an intimacy — a rare quiet moment
amid the profound anger that was beginning to spill from that small
Florida city to cities all across America.
"We can't stop," Tracy Martin, Trayvon's father
said at the time. "If we stop, the world will stop. We've got to keep
fighting."
In Martin's death, a movement was born.
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