The Guardian (USA)

Ahmaud Arbery’s hometown unveils street signs honoring his memory

- Guardian staff and agencies

A crowd of dozens chanted on a sweltering street corner Tuesday as Ahmaud Arbery’s hometown unveiled new street signs honoring the young Black man who was murdered after being chased by three white men and shot in a nearby Georgia neighborho­od – a crime local officials vowed to never forget.

Arbery’s parents joined the memorializ­ation the day after the men responsibl­e for their son’s death received stiff prison sentences in US district court for committing federal hate crimes.

Officials in coastal Brunswick, where Arbery grew up, have ordered that intersecti­ons along all 2.7 miles of Albany Street will have additional signs designatin­g it as Honorary Ahmaud Arbery Street.

The first two signs were unveiled Tuesday at an intersecti­on near the Brunswick African-American cultural center, where one wall is adorned with a giant mural of Arbery’s smiling face.

“That’s an honor, is all I can say,” said Brenda Davis, a dock worker at Brunswick’s busy seaport who lives on Albany Street along a stretch of modest brick and cinder block homes. “He means something to everybody, though a lot of people didn’t know him.”

Arbery was killed on 23 February 2020, after the avid jogger was spotted running in the Satilla Shores subdivisio­n not far from his mother’s house. A white father and son, Greg and Travis McMichael, grabbed guns and used a pickup truck to chase after Arbery, claiming they thought he was burglar. A neighbor, William “Roddie” Bryan, joined the pursuit in his own truck and recorded cellphone video of Travis McMichael shooting Arbery at close range with a shotgun.

No arrests were made for more than two months, until the graphic cellphone video leaked online and Georgia state investigat­ors took over the case

from local police.

Arbery’s death reverberat­ed far beyond Brunswick as protests erupted across the US and internatio­nally over killings of Black people, especially by police, such as George Floyd in Minnesota and Breonna Taylor in Kentucky, or racist vigilantes.

Brunswick city commission­ers voted in December to place Arbery’s name on a city street with a resolution proclaimin­g that he had become “a symbol of strength and unity within our community”.

“We did this because we want to always remember what happened,” Cornell Harvey, who was Brunswick’s mayor when the street designatio­n was adopted, said Tuesday. “You say, ‘Why would you want to remember such a tragedy?’ Because sometimes it takes that to make a change. I am so sorry for the family … but history has seized us,” Harvey added.

The crowd chanted “Long live Ahmaud Arbery!” as his mother and father tugged on opposite ends of a blue covering to reveal the new street sign bearing their son’s name underneath.

Wanda Cooper-Jones, Arbery’s mother, said that although she still mourns his death, she also takes pride in what’s been accomplish­ed in its wake.

Georgia adopted a hate crimes law imposing additional penalties for crimes motivated by a victim’s race, religion, sexual orientatio­n or other factors. And state lawmakers gutted an 1863 state law authorizin­g private citizens to make arrests, which Arbery’s pursuers had sought to use to justify the deadly chase.

“I look at the change Ahmaud has brought since his passing,” CooperJone­s told crowd.

 ?? Photograph: Russ Bynum/AP ?? Wanda Cooper-Jones beneath a new street sign honoring her son, Ahmaud Arbery.
Photograph: Russ Bynum/AP Wanda Cooper-Jones beneath a new street sign honoring her son, Ahmaud Arbery.

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