On February 26th, 2012, Trayvon Martin was shot and killed by a
white neighborhood watch volunteer named George Zimmerman. Trayvon Martin was
walking home wearing a black hoodie and holding a pack of skittles and an
Arizona in his hand when Zimmerman shot him, claiming he looked
suspicious.
On February 26th, 2016, just 4 years later North Carolina A&T
supported Trayvon Martin in front of the reflection pool, with spoken word,
poems, songs, and a discussion. In the discussion many people talked about
where they were when they first heard about what happened and how they felt
about it. Many people said they were at home and when they heard about it. One person
stated that race had not even been a factor at the time. He just felt that the
whole situation was messed up in general. Other people felt that we go to an
HBCU and almost everyone should be out by the reflection pool to support and
share their ideas, however there was only a good 15 of us outside. The
discussion went as deep as to talking about how everyone felt when they found
out Zimmerman was acquitted. They felt that it was officially going to be a
war. This whole situation officially opened everyone’s eyes and showed people
what has still been going on in the world. We had candles with people’s names
on them who died in the same situation that people never even heard about
before the Trayvon Martin case. Travon Martin sparked the Black Lives Matter
Movement, the peace riots, etc. One boy stated that he had went into a store
with his mother and a white man was following him around and the boy stopped
and the man said “May I help you?” And the boy said, “I’m just shopping in the
store with my mother is that okay?” And so he went and told his mother what
happened and his mother approached the man and said why were you following my
son around and the man said “Because your son is resembles the type of people
we are looking for.” And his son had on an A&T hat a hoodie and some
sweatpants. Another person stated that African Americans as a whole should stop
worrying about what people see them as and what people are going to think and
just go out and do what they feel is right and what needs to be done. They
stated that people like Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X had people behind
them supporting them in what they were doing. It wasn’t just them by themselves
but they had a whole community supporting what was right. And that is what we
need to do as a whole and as an HBCU.
My personal experience of
the whole Trayvon Martin case was when I participated in the Trayvon Martin
march in New York. It surprised me when some people rolled up their windows or
even yelled out that we should listen to the police. I couldn’t believe that
they felt it was okay to just shoot a random boy who did nothing wrong. I
remember when I found out Zimmerman was acquitted I was personally hurt. There were
black mothers on the jury who had sons and they still felt that Zimmerman had a
right to be free.
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