In 2020, the black lives matter movement shook the world
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN

Play all audios:

LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY – When mass protests erupted in Louisville, Kentucky, on May 28, one of Chanelle Helm’s biggest worries was for the young people who took to the streets. Anger had been
building over the March 13 police killing of 26-year-old Breonna Taylor in Louisville’s West End. Not long after Taylor’s story gained national attention, the world watched footage on May 25
of George Floyd screaming, “I can’t breathe” and crying out for his mother under the knee of a white police officer before going motionless in Minneapolis, Minnesota. It was not only
important for the new people, especially Louisville’s youth, who joined the protest to stay as safe as possible, but also for demonstrators to stay in the streets, Helm, a co-founder of
Black Lives Matter Louisville, said. “I had to do direct action training with them on the fly,” the 40-year-old recalled. Hundreds of protesters rallied in the city’s downtown, demanding
justice for Taylor, who was killed when plain-clothes Louisville Metro Police Department (LMPD) officers barged into her home in the early morning hours while serving a “no-knock” warrant.
Advertisement As the sun went down, tensions rose. Police, dressed in riot gear, fired tear gas and other projectiles. Some protesters destroyed property and set fires. Many people suffered
injuries, including seven who were wounded when someone opened fire into the crowd. It was a night that shook Louisville, and for protesters, it was only day one. Protesters, organisers and
activists have gathered in some form on most, if not all, of the more than 200 days since then. The groups sometimes number in the hundreds; other times, only a few gather in a downtown
park, renamed by protesters as “Injustice Square”. The protests often bring people from Black Lives Matter, Louisville Urban League, Kentucky Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression
and other groups. Seeing protesters gather day-after-day “makes me know that what happens in this part of resistance work and fighting for our freedom, and this continual process of seeing
people develop these spaces, that we’re doing exactly what we need to do,” Helm said. It is a sentiment echoed by Black Lives Matter organisers across the country as they reflect on a year
that has brought much pain, but also numerous achievements, and as they chart their priorities moving into 2021. FROM POLICE TO COVID: ‘DISRUPTING STATE-SANCTIONED VIOLENCE’ The Black Lives
Matter (BLM) movement was founded by three Black women – Patrisse Cullors, Alicia Garza and Opal Tometi – after the acquittal of the man who shot dead 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in 2013.
Since then, #BlackLivesMatter has borne a global network, other organisations and dozens of local BLM chapters across the United States. Protests under the Black Lives Matter banner have
rocked streets in cities big and small. And organisers have sought to “to eradicate white supremacy and build local power to intervene in violence inflicted on Black communities by the state
and vigilantes”. Building on the work of previous years, Melina Abdullah, co-founder of Black Lives Matter Los Angeles (BLMLA), the first chapter of BLM, says the group began 2020 thinking
it was going to be an opportunity to usher in more transformative change through November’s election. But then, the coronavirus pandemic hit, disproportionately affecting Black communities,
and BLMLA knew immediately it had to take action. Advertisement “We’ve never been just about ending police violence, but about disrupting state-sanctioned violence against Black people,”
Abdullah told Al Jazeera by phone. “One of the big priorities with the COVID-19 pandemic was really this history and legacy of medical racism.” After initially demanding data that examined
how the virus was affecting different communities, BLMLA, along with a coalition of other social justice groups and community leaders, issued the “Black Los Angeles Demands in Light of
COVID-19 and Rates of Black Death”, which laid out policy demands for elected leaders. BLMLA also convened a coalition of groups to create the People’s Budget, which called “for investments
to ensure Black residents have resources in light of COVID-19”. Abdullah said that initially, very few elected officials responded to the demands. But then Floyd was killed in Minneapolis,
prompting what the organiser called the “resurgence of Black Lives Matter”, and chapters across the US saw more people want to get involved. “‘Defund the police’ has been a mantra for the
last five years, but it really became kind of the clarion call of this moment,” she said. The groups have seen successes. In November, Los Angeles County voters approved Measure J, which
requires at least 10 percent of the county’s locally-generated revenue go to community-focused alternatives to traditional incarceration. The county also voted out District Attorney Jackie
Lacey, who BLMLA actively protested against this year. Advertisement When US media began to float Mayor Eric Garcetti’s name as a possible contender for Cabinet post in the incoming Biden
administration, Black Lives Matter LA launched daily #BlockGarcetti protests outside his home. Garcetti acknowledged earlier this month that he will not serve in the administration. The city
council also approved a $150 million cut to the Los Angeles Police Department budget, though it falls significantly short of what the People’s Budget demands. When US media began to float
Mayor Eric Garcetti’s name as a possible contender for Cabinet post in the incoming Biden administration, Black Lives Matter LA launched daily #BlockGarcetti protests outside his home.
Garcetti acknowledged earlier this month that he will not serve in the administration. “What’s really been the priority of 2020 and continues to be our priority as we move into 2021 is
really taking advantage of this moment,” Abdullah said. “We didn’t anticipate that everything would change, but as everything’s changing, it’s imperative that we not just kind of tinker
around the edges with fundamentally unjust systems, but that we actually take this moment to transform the world in which we live.” ‘WE WANTED TO HELP EMPOWER’ That is the goal of Black
Lives Matter in Minnesota, said Trahern Crews, a lead organiser with the state chapter. When Floyd was killed in Minneapolis in May, the city became the epicentre of summer protests. “We
wanted to help empower” the thousands of people, especially the young people, who protested during those first few days, Crews told Al Jazeera by phone. “We wanted to help them organise.”
Advertisement One of Crews’s proudest moments was witnessing the solidarity protests that took over hundreds of cities nationwide – and around the world – in the days, weeks and months after
Floyd was killed. At the height of the movement in June, tens of thousands of people took to the streets in cities across Latin America, Europe, Australia and Canada to demonstrate against
racial injustice. Analysing data polling regarding the protests in the US at that time, The New York Times concluded that Black Lives Matter may be the biggest movement in the country’s
history. Not only did Minneapolis protesters take to the streets, but the city also saw an outpouring of support for residents and visitors alike. Activists set up food banks and donation
centres with clothing, masks, hand sanitiser and other goods. “A lot of people were suffering, so it was good to see that we were able to help give back,” Crews said. Amid the protests, the
city banned chokeholds and neck restraints like the one used on Floyd. Officers are also now required to try to stop improper force by fellow officers. The state passed similar police reform
legislation in July. All four officers involved in Floyd’s death face charges. Some promises – like a commitment from city leaders to dismantle the Minneapolis police department – have
stalled in recent months. But BLM Minnesota and other groups have been able to start or reignite conversations around reparations and economic inclusion for Black communities. That will
continue to be a priority, Crews says, moving into 2021. He also said BLM Minnesota will seek to hold Joe Biden accountable when he is sworn in as US president on January 20. Advertisement
“Joe Biden wouldn’t have won without the Black people in Detroit, the Black people in Philadelphia, the Black people in Georgia,” Crews said. “So now it’s time for him to keep his part of
the deal and do something about police accountability in the US and the wealth gap. It’s a crisis.” POLICE STILL KILL BLACK PEOPLE AT DISPROPORTIONATE RATES The work of Black Lives Matter
chapters has been seen in the streets, legislatures and the ballot boxes of other cities across the US. While the “defund the police” call has faced criticism from politicians – liberals and
conservatives alike – several cities have made at least modest cuts to their police departments and reallocated some of those funds to community programmes. Other cities took significant
steps in considering reparations for descendants of slaves. California established a task force to make recommendations on reparations. The issue also gained renewed interest at the national
level. Confederate symbols and statues came down. Protesters forced businesses, media organisations and other companies to finally recognise and examine institutional racism and develop
policies to address it. And many cities enacted police reforms – albeit not at the level many would like. The Black Lives Matter Global Network (BLMGN) also launched a get out the vote
effort under #WhatMatters2020. Black voters proved instrumental in Biden’s victory in November. Advertisement But with all the successes also came setbacks. Ten local chapters wrote an open
letter earlier this month, expressing concern with the global network in how recent decisions were made and money has been allocated. BLMGN did not respond to Al Jazeera’s request for
comment. According to a Pew study, support for Black Lives Matter surged in June at the height of the protests but fell by September, though the majority of Americans (55 percent) still say
they strongly or somewhat support the movement. Among Black Americans, however, support has remained strong. At the same time, police killings have not stopped. On December 22, an officer
killed 47-year-old Andre Hill in Columbus, Ohio. Just weeks earlier, in the same city, a sheriff’s deputy killed 23-year-old Casey Goodson Jr. A Texas officer killed Jonathan Price in
October; Dijon Kizzee was killed in Los Angeles in August; Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta, Georgia, in June. According to Mapping Police Violence, police have killed at least 1,066 people in
2020. More than 28 percent of those killed were Black, despite African Americans making up only 13 percent of the US population. Police also responded to those protesting and documenting
police brutality with more police brutality. Thousands have been arrested. Many have been injured. And Black communities are also still reeling from the effects of the pandemic. THE MOVEMENT
CONTINUES That is why Black Lives Matter organisers and others say the protests and work will not stop. Advertisement Back in Louisville, Helm says organisers and protesters will continue
their work educating residents about the importance of community power. They have seen an outpouring of support, raising millions of dollars for bail funds that have helped support hundreds
of protesters facing charges. Black Lives Matter Louisville has also found housing for people in need and built out their operations to better serve the community. Under pressure, the city
leaders agreed to create a civilian review board (though it still needs work, Helm said). They also banned no-knock warrants, but organisers and activists are calling on Kentucky to pass a
statewide version of the ban, known as “Breonna’s Law”. Protesters are also continuing to demand justice for Taylor and her family. This week, the city’s interim police chief reportedly
served pre-termination papers to two officers in Taylor’s case: One who sought the warrant and one who fired the bullet that killed the 26-year-old emergency room technician. Another officer
has already been fired. But the family demands charges be filed. “Anything less than criminal charges here by a competent prosecutor is unacceptable,” Taylor’s family lawyers said in a
statement on Wednesday. Black Lives Matter and similar groups will continue to shake Louisville, and the world, Helm and other organisers said. “We have been abused. The police have come in
our home and snatched us from our parents, or snatched our parents or others out of homes. We’ve had to visit family members behind bars. We’ve had to mourn, even this year, the loss of
family members murdered by the state or inter-communal violence … but we still do the work,” Helm concluded. “They want to see broken people do some f*****-up s***. But we’re not those types
of people. We’re going to f*** up, but we’re going to f*** up in a way that gets us free.”