The National Action Network and other activists
gathered in front of Brooklyn Borough Hall Sunday afternoon to pay tribute to George
Floyd a year after his murder.
His death at the hands
of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin sparked protests all over the five boroughs and
the world. However, rally organizer Courtney
Nelson says Sunday’s gathering was more like a celebration.
"It was a tragedy a
year ago, but it doesn't have to be a tragedy today," she says.
Nelson says she wants to acknowledge the
policy changes since last summer and Chauvin’s guilty verdict last month.
"We're here to celebrate the change that's
happening, and we're also getting justice from the change, so that's what we
wanted today to be about,” she says.
Terrance Floyd, George Floyd's brother, was seen
dancing to the music at the gathering. He says he's proud of the changes made
and those to come.
"Change is what's being
made now, after the verdict, and change throughout the police department and this
nation, and then justice is what we're going to continue to fight for,"
Terrance Floyd says.
He says he wants to continue to celebrate his brother's life, and
he shared a message for him.
"I'm going to keep
walking where you can't walk, I'm going to keep talking when you can't talk,
and I'm going to keep loving when you can't love. I'm going to let your legacy
live on," he says.
The rally also signified the
launch of the website
wearefloyd.org,
which plans to help families dealing with social injustice and police brutality.