The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Pain of racism nothing new to Floyd's family

Many chapters of their history marked by injustice.

- By Molly Hennessy-Fiske

EAGAN, MINN. — Growing up in a shack surrounded by piney woods and tobacco fields in eastern North Carolina, George Floyd’s aunt Angela Harrelson was taught by her sharecropp­er parents how to get along in a slowly desegregat­ing America: Sit at the back of the bus, do what white folks tell you, “stay strong and hold on.”

That’s what she did when she boarded the local school bus in the 1970s and white students blocked the seats with their feet, making her stand in the aisle. The bus driver, also white, would swerve and threaten to slap black students if they fell. Some days, he wouldn’t pick her up at all.

“But we held on,” Harrelson said as she sat at her kitchen table this week in a Minneapoli­s suburb.

The abuse only stopped, she said, when a white girl boarded the bus one day and declared, “My Mama said this is wrong. Stop picking on them.”

“She was brave because she stood up against her own,” recalled Harrelson, 58. “It takes one person to make a change, speaking up.”

Speaking up

That’s what she sees happening now across the nation and the world as protests spread in the wake of her nephew’s death at the hands of police. The tragedy stirred memories for Harrelson of the legacy of segregatio­n, slights and stinging preju- dice her family has endured.

She hopes the four police officers charged in the case, including former officer Derek Chauvin, 44, who is accused of murder, will face justice from a government that has allowed white people to discrimina­te against African Americans for generation­s.

Floyd, who the family called by his middle name, Perry, moved to Minneapoli­s three years ago to be closer to Harrelson and to build a new life. An unmarried father of three, Floyd, 46, wanted to escape the low-in- come Houston neighborho­od where he grew up. Harrelson promised his mother she would look after him.

“They lived in a tough environmen­t, so he said he was coming to make a fresh start and she was happy,” Harrelson recalled. He took a job as a bouncer and a retail clerk; he got engaged and, although he was 6 feet, 7 inches tall, he still had maturing to do.

A year after he arrived, Floyd’s mother died, and Harrelson felt even more responsibl­e for him. They met a couple of times and FaceTimed often. As her parents had done with her, she warned her nephew about dealing with the white establishm­ent, specifical­ly police. She drew her advice from experience.

Her great-grandfathe­r, Hil- lary Thomas Stewart, was a slave. He got his freedom at age 8, and settled near Goldsboro, N.C. By age 21,

Stewart had accumulate­d 500 acres of land and mar- ried a woman named Larcenia, who would bear him 22 children.

In black-and-white fam- ily photos, Stewart poses with his wife in front of a china cabinet full of crock- ery, wearing a dress shirt and suspenders.

“He did the best he could to build a legacy for us,” Harrelson said.

But the couple couldn’t read or write. White farmers settled their land; they were powerless to fight back.

“It was stolen from them,” Harrelson said.

Her grandmothe­r, Sophell Suggs, cleaned white fami- lies’ homes during segregatio­n. She told Harrelson stories about how she had to enter through the back door; how the women wouldn’t give her gloves even to wash their soiled menstrual rags. One of Harrelson’s earliest memories is passing a water fountain labeled “Whites Only.”

Her mother, Laura Stewart Jones, worked the tobacco fields for $2.50 a day. Sometimes the white farmers refused to pay. Her father, who served in the U.S. Army in Korea and worked at a barbecue on the side, would get upset at being cheated, and they would have to move to another shack without indoor plumbing.

Bigger plans

Jones had become preg- nant with the first of 14 children at age 13 but taught her- self to read, write and play piano. Harrelson was the youngest of her 10 daughters, all of whom graduated from high school.

But Harrelson had

grander plans. She worked the tobacco fields during high school, became head cheerleade­r and won a local beauty pageant. After grad- uation, she left to attend community college in Iowa where she hoped to become a lawyer. She enlisted in the Army reserves, then the Navy reserves, to pay for school.

One day, a professor called her into his office. She couldn’t become a lawyer, he said, she couldn’t even take law classes. He wouldn’t teach her because she was black. Harrelson decided to study psychology instead, then become a registered nurse and Air Force Reserve officer. Officials told her she couldn’t. She ignored them.

By 1998, she had received her commission as a captain in the reserves, married a flight attendant and was looking for jobs when a potential employer urged her to move to Minneapoli­s. There was plenty of work for nurses, and as tall and pretty as she was, she modeled in her spare time.

Soon after settling in Eagan, an inner suburb, where racism was often hidden in “Minnesota nice,” Harrelson went to get her hair done at the J.C. Penney salon in a local mall. She saw they had products to wash and condition black hair, but their sole black stylist was off, and the white stylist refused.

Harrelson sat down in the salon chair.

“I was like Rosa Parks,” she said, laughing. “I said, ‘I’m not getting out of this chair. I’m not trying to make a statement, I just don’t want to drive to North Minneapoli­s.’”

The white stylist phoned

her black co-worker, who explained the procedures. Afterward, the white woman said she had been nervous because she’d never styled black hair.

“You weren’t comfortabl­e because I’m black,” Harrel- son said. “Let’s call it what it is.”

The woman agreed.

Being careful

Harrelson has learned to avoid getting into the elevator at her apartment complex late at night if a white woman is already on, because she’ll inevitably jump or clench her purse in fear. If she’s stopped by police, she responds to their commands in ultraslow motion, narrating her every move.

After the police stopped her nephew last week, she watched the bystander’s video of police restrainin­g him and wished she had been there to rush in and turn him on his side to clear his airway so he would never have had to utter what were among his last words: “I can’t breathe.”

“He could only fight with his words. He was fighting for his life with his words, and nobody would listen,” she said.

She chafed at prosecutor­s’ delays, at the release of an autopsy that initially failed to label his death a homicide — until after the family’s lawyer released results of their independen­t autopsy this week.

“If we didn’t have an attorney, if we didn’t have a second autopsy, what do you think would have happened?” she said.

Harrelson has considered leaving Minneapoli­s, but she plans to stay until the cases against the officers charged with killing him are resolved. “I want to see this through,” she said.

Before her nephew’s death, she felt people didn’t want to talk about racism even in progressiv­e cities like Minneapoli­s. Now, she’s encouraged there’s a conversati­on about it across the country.

“What happened to George changed people’s hearts,” she said, got them talking about the history of not just police brutality, but also the very inequities in education, employment and housing her family has faced.

“That’s a huge start, because you can’t do something if you don’t acknowledg­e it,” Harrelson said. “They just say you’re playing the race card, that happened 400 years ago. But it’s systematic racism.”

 ?? JASON ARMOND / LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Angela Harrelson of Eagan, Minnesota, aunt of George Perry Floyd, displays a photo of her nephew as a child being held by his late mother and Harrelson’s sister, Larcenia Jones Floyd.
JASON ARMOND / LOS ANGELES TIMES Angela Harrelson of Eagan, Minnesota, aunt of George Perry Floyd, displays a photo of her nephew as a child being held by his late mother and Harrelson’s sister, Larcenia Jones Floyd.
 ?? VICTOR J. BLUE / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Visitors gather Wednesday in front of a portrait of George Floyd at the site of his death on a Minneapoli­s street. The death of the unarmed, handcuffed African American man in police custody has ignited protests across the country.
VICTOR J. BLUE / NEW YORK TIMES Visitors gather Wednesday in front of a portrait of George Floyd at the site of his death on a Minneapoli­s street. The death of the unarmed, handcuffed African American man in police custody has ignited protests across the country.

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