The Mercury News

Protests, parades mark Fourth

Nation’s history of racism, police violence, along with virus, converge to dampen mood for some; others enjoy fireworks

- By Leonardo Castañeda and Nico Savidge Staff writers

Bay Area residents marked a Fourth of July overshadow­ed by a worsening pandemic and civil unrest over long-simmering racism and police violence with protests, demonstrat­ions — and some old-fashioned parades and firework shows.

In Oakland, hundreds of demonstrat­ors rallied at Frank H. Ogawa Plaza before marching up Broadway, denouncing the national holiday. The vast majority of the crowd wore masks, many dressed in black.

“This is the most fitting way to celebrate the Fourth of July — this year and every year,” said Zohra Rahimi. The 17-year-old marched while holding a sign that read, “The Fourth is a celebratio­n of historical fallacy.”

“This year has been a wake-up call,” Rahimi said. “We can’t celebrate this holiday until we have independen­ce for all.”

As they marched, a few protesters lit firecracke­rs that boomed off downtown Oakland’s newly constructe­d apartment buildings. The crowd chanted, “Black people used to live here,” and “How do you spell racist? O-P-D.”

Ehryn Ortega, a 22-year-old who came to the protest from Hayward with her parents, was one of several marchers who said they have long had conflicted feelings about the Fourth of July given how incongruou­s its message of freedom and equality has been with America’s history of slavery and racism.

“It has definitely been an odd holiday to celebrate as a Black person in the United States,” Ortega said.

In prior years, her family has spent the day getting together at barbecues, where she said the mood is both celebrator­y and reflective.

With those gatherings out of the question because of the virus, Ortega thought about staying home but put on a pair of black fist earrings and headed to the protest instead.

“You celebrate independen­ce — independen­ce for whom?” she asked.

At Lake Merritt, hundreds of people gathered for protests and for barbecuing — an activity that itself became increasing­ly political after a white woman called police on a group of Black men cooking at the lake in 2018, spurring an annual Bbqing While Black gathering. Some vendors at the lake sold T-shirts of George

Floyd, a Black man killed while in police custody in Minnesota in May.

The killing of Floyd, as a police officer knelt on his neck for nearly 9 minutes, and of Breonna Taylor, a Black emergency room technician who was shot to death in March in her home in Louisville, Kentucky, by police officers who had forced their way in with a no-knock warrant, sparked weeks of protests nationwide. Some Bay Area cities, under pressure from the sustained protests, have started to shift some funding away from police toward Black communitie­s amid larger policing reforms.

While official firework shows have been canceled in most of the Bay Area to limit crowds and prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s, residents have been holding their own shows in the region, sometimes to the chagrin of their neighbors. Sales in cities where fireworks are allowed, including Dublin, Newark, Union City and San Bruno, were booming earlier in the week, and an official fireworks show at Gilroy High School was scheduled to take place Saturday night, although parking at the school has been closed and residents were advised to enjoy the festivitie­s from their homes.

In Fremont, a nonprofit that normally organizes the city’s Fourth of July parade organized a porch version of the festivitie­s. Homes and businesses decked out in U.S. flags competed for awards in categories including most patriotic, most outstandin­g decoration­s, and spirit of freedom for the entrant with the most inspiring message.

And in San Jose, some neighbors gathered outside their homes for the annual Naglee Park car parade, watching decorated BMWS, Westfalia vans and a ’41 Chevy truck pass by.

On Empire Street, a couple of hundred protesters danced on the street while listening to hip-hop music as volunteers painted “Black Lives Matter” across three closed-off blocks.

That gathering was organized in conjunctio­n with the family of Anthony Nunez, an 18-year-old East San Jose resident who was killed by San Jose police on this day four years ago.

 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Residents of the Naglee Park neighborho­od of San Jose hold their annual Fourth of July car parade Saturday.
KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Residents of the Naglee Park neighborho­od of San Jose hold their annual Fourth of July car parade Saturday.
 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? A Black Lives Matter mural is painted on three blocks of Empire Street in San Jose on Saturday. The community gathering was organized with the family of Anthony Nunez, who was killed by San Jose police four years ago.
KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER A Black Lives Matter mural is painted on three blocks of Empire Street in San Jose on Saturday. The community gathering was organized with the family of Anthony Nunez, who was killed by San Jose police four years ago.

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