ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 5月26日 01時05分


Three years have passed since George Floyd was murdered by a Minneapolis police officer. While the widespread protests against police violence in the U.S. have quieted, the psychological pain Black people experience when a police officer injures or kills a Black person persists.

Black people in America are killed by the police at three times the rate of their white counterparts. Victims and their families, as well as bystanders, are often scarred by these events. But there is evidence that the millions of Black people indirectly exposed to police violence are affected, too.

The New York Times dispatched reporters in more than 20 U.S. cities to interview 110 Black people, across generations and socioeconomic groups, about how acts of police violence affect them.

“There's always one case that kind of sticks with you,” said KT Kennedy, a youth and community organizer from Brooklyn. “I feel like we're all specifically haunted by one murder at least.”

Swipe to see some of their stories and read more at the link in our bio.

Photos by @ericginnardphoto @kevin.mohatt @mugnamwerdna @markabramsonphoto @mason_trinca @meredithheuerphotog @kevin.mohatt @helynn.ospina @elias.williams


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