Celtics' Brown, Pacers' Brogdon
join Atlanta protest
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[June 01, 2020]
Boston Celtics forward Jaylen
Brown drove 15 hours from Boston to help lead a peaceful protest in
Atlanta on Saturday night, he said on a live stream of his Instagram
account.
"I drove 15 hours to get to Georgia, my community," said Brown, who
is from Marietta, Ga., and is also a vice president of the National
Basketball Players Association. "This is a peaceful protest. Being a
celebrity, being an NBA player don't exclude me from no
conversations at all. First and foremost, I'm a black man and I'm a
member of this community. ... We're raising awareness for some of
the injustices that we've been seeing. It's not OK.
"As a young person, you've got to listen to our perspective. Our
voices need to be heard. I'm 23 years old. I don't know all of the
answers. But I feel how everybody else is feeling, for sure. No
question."
Brown, 23, posted a photo of himself holding a sign reading "I Can't
Breathe," a reference to the death of George Floyd earlier this
week. He was joined by Indiana Pacers guard Malcolm Brogdon, who is
also an NBPA vice president, and guard Justin Anderson of the
Brooklyn Nets' G League affiliate. Brogdon and Anderson played
together in college at Virginia.
Floyd, who is black, died while in police custody in Minneapolis on
Monday, leading to murder and manslaughter charges against officer
Derek Chauvin, who is white. Fervent protests have emerged in dozens
of cities across the nation this week, with some remaining peaceful
and some turning violent.
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Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown (7) controls the ball during the
first half against the Brooklyn Nets at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit:
Greg M. Cooper-USA TODAY Sports
Brown posted on Twitter late Saturday that three people who were
part of his protest were arrested, and he asked for help in finding
the names of those arrested.
Brogdon, a 27-year-old born in Atlanta, emphasized his pride in his
city and his sense of purpose being part of the peaceful protest.
"This is a moment. We have leverage right now," he said in Brown's
video. "We have a moment in time. People are going to look back, our
kids are going to look back at this and say, 'You were part of
that.' I've got a grandfather that marched next to [Martin Luther
King Jr.] in the '60s, and he was amazing. He would be proud to see
us all here. We got to keep pushing forward.
"Jaylen has led this charge, man, and I'm proud of him. We need more
leaders."
--Field Level Media
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