
When Zellie Imani first arrived on the streets of Ferguson, Missouri, a decade agoโnot long after a white cop killed Michael Brown, an unarmed teenagerโthe first thing he noticed was the tension beneath the calm.
Imani, a schoolteacher and community organizer, arrived on the scene from New Jersey to join the front-line ranks of the protesters, angry that yet another defenseless Black person had lost their life at the hands of police.
In the rising heat of a late summer morning, he saw militarized policeโbatons and riot shields out, assault weapons and armored vehicles deployedโand angry demonstrators warily eyeing one another in an uneasy truce.
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โPeople were just standing around, milling around,โ Imani says, recalling that day in August 2014, not long after the community exploded in anger and frustration at Brownโs senseless death. Heavy-handed police had put a lid on things, but only for the moment.
โEveryone knew that it turns up at night,โ Imani says.
Friday marks the 10th anniversary of Brownโs killing, a horrific incident that sparked months of nightly demonstrations that put a spotlight on the unjustified use of deadly force against Black people. It also catapulted the #BlackLivesMatter movement to the top of the national agenda and forced a long-overdue conversation on systemic racism in America.
And while police killings havenโt stoppedโat least four other high-profile cases, including the killing of George Floyd, happened after former Ferguson officer Darren WIlson shot Michael Brownโseveral officers have faced consequences for their actions. That includes Derek Chauvin, who is serving 21 years in prison for Floydโs death.
By the time the Ferguson protests ended, the Justice Department launched an investigation that would reveal decades of injustice and racist practices by the Ferguson city government. That included gerrymandering that stunted Black representation on the city council, racial bias and poor screening in police department hiring practices, and law-enforcement tactics that targeted Black motorists for minor traffic violations, bringing in revenue for the city.
If you were Black and driving through Ferguson, โyou had to make sure that your tail lights worked, your headlights worked, your plates were registered correctly, you didnโt speed because you were going to be a target,โ Troy Doyle, Fergusonโs police chief, told National Public Radio in an interview broadcast on Wednesday.
Doyle, who is Black and grew up in the area and is the cityโs second Black police chief. The first, Delrish Moss, came into office in 2016 after a series of reforms overhauling the police department. Those reforms helped Black residents elect two Black members to the Ferguson city council and ushered in the cityโs first Black mayor, Ella Jones, in 2020.
Those gains, however, likely were unimaginable to Imani, the New Jersey school teacher who came to Ferguson to help organize protests
Faaa was just after Brownโs death. For the next few weeks, he and his comrades spent days organizing protests over Brownโs death and nights dodging police firing teargas canisters and rubber bullets โ a risky, violent, potentially deadly cat-and-mouse game.
On the street that first day, Imani knew that all hell would break loose after sunset โ and he was right.
โThatโs what I experienced on that first night,โ he says. โWe stayed out and we were engaging in protest. I remember, vividly, a group of young men who were shirtless. They had their shirts wrapped around their mouths because that was the only way they could protect themselves from being tear-gassed because they knew they were going to get tear gassed again.โ
He goes on: โThere was a clergy member who was begging them to go home and they told the clergy person, โDonโt tell us to go home so we donโt get killed because theyโre out here killing us anyway.โ
So it went for the next few weeks, with Imani dodging teargas canisters and rubber bullets from police he says were โshooting indiscriminately into the crowdโโeven if no one had assaulted them first. โIt just really showed me the violence that police are willing to administer.โ
When the protests subsided and the school year approached, Imani returned to New Jersey and life moved on. Meanwhile, the grim drumbeat of police killing Black people under dubious circumstances goes on: Floyd, Philando Castile, Breanna Taylor, Daunte Wright, now Sonya Massey, shot in her home in southern Illinois last month.
But Imani says the protests he joined in Ferguson that hot August week have made a clear difference in the conversation around race and policing.
โIn my generation, talking about race was a taboo thing,โ he says. โPeople would say youโre playing the race card. So even trying to talk about racism or police violence, you were being constantly silenced and gaslit. But because of what happened in Ferguson and everything else, the discussion of race and discourse of race became a new part of our culture.โ
At the same time, โyou do see changes in the way that people are talking about policing,โ Imani says. โPeople are just not focusing on, โOh, we need more training,โ or โWe need body cameras.โ People are moving more into the conversations about, โHey, maybe police officers shouldnโt be the ones to respond when someone is going through a mental health crisis.โโ
โThings are changing,โ he says. โNot at the pace that we want to change, obviously, but things are evolving.โ
A veteran journalist, political analyst, and essayist, Joseph Williams has been published in a wide range of publications, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, Politico, The Boston Globe, The Atlantic, and US News & World Report. A California native, Williams is a graduate of the University Of Richmond and a former Nieman Fellow at Harvard University. He lives and works in metro Washington, D.C.
This story was republished with permission from Word on Black.
