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Throngs Impassion Flagler Beach March Against Racism as Teach-In Forms Around Bullhorn

June 4, 2020 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

 The second march of the day, in Flagler Beach, drew upwards of 300 people and featured a series of speakers at Veterans Park, among them Henry. (© FlaglerLive)
The second march of the day, in Flagler Beach, drew upwards of 300 people and featured a series of speakers at Veterans Park, among them Enosch Henry, a 2018 graduate of Flagler Palm Coast High School. (© FlaglerLive)

There were a lot more speeches, more palpable anger, more names of the dead  spoken and memorialized in signs, more variety in ages, with a distinctly younger crowd whose voices were amplified by a bullhorn.




Flagler Beach’s late afternoon march Wednesday to protest the murder of George Floyd at police’s hands included many of the 200-some people who’d protested at midday through the heart of Palm Coast. But by the time it had crossed the State Road 100 bridge and thronged in a large circle around an amphitheatre-like tribune where mostly young, impassioned protesters spoke, the march had grown to upwards of 300 people–a considerable number for Flagler Beach. (Flagler Beach police put the estimate at 200 people, but an analysis of images of the protest clearly puts the number higher than 300.) The hour morphed into a teach-in as speaker after speaker mixed personal experiences with visceral anger, calls to action, hope and urgency.

Few marchers were without signs, fewer still without voices as they first gathered at Wadsworth Park, where parking ran out, before crossing the bridge twice, with the tribune in Veterans Park taking place in between. Flagler Beach Police Chief Matt Doughney marched with the protesters both times across the bridge and largely kept his and the Flagler County Sheriff’s personnel at the far rim of the protest, except when the marchers crossed the bridge, where they were given police escorts with patrol cars and deputies on bicycles. 




As at the Palm Coast march earlier, Doughney and the sheriff’s office reported zero incidents, though a few businesses in Flagler Beach had closed out of fear that they might be targeted by looters–just as Bealls, Walmart and Kohl’s had closed earlier in the day in Palm Coast. The marchers dismissed any notion of violence, not wanting to be tainted by the isolated actions of a few detractors elsewhere, or media’s tendency to disproportionately play up a few images of violence  to the detriment of the innumerable, peaceful marches of the last few days. 

“Of course there’s always going to be anger in it,” Enosch Henry, a 2018 graduate of Flagler Palm Coast High School and one of the speakers, said afterward. “We’re doing this out of passion, and passion brings out a lot of emotion, so anger, love, hope, faith, you know what I mean? Fear. But I think the main thing that we were drawing on was a sense of hope, because the main theme through everyone speaking was that there’s going to be change. For the better, not for worse. You know what I mean? Yeah, I’m convinced. I believe. Because what’s happening right now has never happened before in American history, to the extent that it’s happening, and the whole societal impact that it’s happening right now. It’s completely different. There’s going to be a change, and America is not going to be the same that it was in 2019, 2018, 2017, 2016. This is different, especially with everything that’s gone on, Covid-19 and all that, people are struggling, you know what I mean? So it’s going to be different.” 

Marchers prepare to cross the bridge again. (© FlaglerLive)
Marchers prepare to cross the bridge again. (© FlaglerLive)

As Henry was speaking, differentiating the day’s marches from those of the past, he could have been echoing the words of President Obama, who just then was speaking in a virtual town hall and making a similar comparison, dismissing the criticism that nothing has changed since 1964. “You look at those protests,” Obama said of the current rounds, “and that was a far more representative cross-section of America out on the streets peacefully protesting, and who felt moved to do something because of the injustices that they had seen. That didn’t exist back in the 1960s, that kind of broad coalition. The fact that recent surveys have showed that despite some protests having then been marked by the actions of some, a tiny minority that engaged in violence, as usual that got a lot of attention and a lot of focus, despite all that a majority of Americans still think those protests were justified. That wouldn’t have existed 30, 40, 50 years ago.”




Henry, who had been at the Palm Coast protest earlier in the day, sought to make one other distinction: Henry had been at the Palm Coast protest earlier. “It’s more visible,” he said, with social media “where people are actively watching. It has its pros, it has its cons, but with this whole movement, I promise you, this whole movement would not have been as strong without social media, because we saw the video. Usually when things like this happen, people try to discredit the victim, they try to say he had a criminal past, oh, he was resisting, he was doing this. With the video, nine minutes, all right? Nine minutes the officer had his knee on George Floyd’s neck, and we saw it, the whole nine minutes, he was not resisting, he was peaceful. We saw it. They can’t argue against that.” 

But the fear of protest is undeniable, too: there’d been a Flagler Beach march organized earlier in the week, only to be cancelled, said Madison Barchowski and Emily Sonni, who ended up becoming the de facto organizers of Wednesday’s march. 

On the bridge. (© FlaglerLive)

Sonni had just woken up over a week ago when her boyfriend was watching the video of George Floyd. She watched the whole thing and broke down. “We are not in control right now but we are trucking to be in control, and we need to be in control, and that’s why we do things like this,” Sonni, 23, said. Barchowski, Sonni’s closest friend, had a similar reaction to the video. She was speaking with her mother–Karen Barchowski, owner of Sally’s Ice Cream in Flagler Beach with a social conscience of her own, but not necessarily on social media–and found out that she had not been as aware of the recent violence, because she also doesn’t watch television. “I was sending her videos, and then I was just talking to my sister, and I just broke down, like I felt we’re never going to see change,” Barchowski said. She decided to re-start the effort the Facebook push had tried, but off of social media, by word of mouth, to avoid drawing threats. “I figured, well, if they don’t know where we’re going to be and when we’re going to be there, then we can do it,”  Barchowski  said. 




Word spread plenty, of course, with the local Democratic clubs helping. Barchowski and Sonni didn’t realize to what extent: they had not expected the turnout Wednesday. “Somebody told me that they were told people didn’t think it was going to be good for the businesses in town and it was going to get violent, and I was like, one, I don’t think that’s true, and two, I was like, they’re not going to silence us. We should not be the one to stay home. They should be the ones to stay home. So it was like, no, we’re not going to stay home.”

Word spread. “When we were on the bridge and I looked behind us, that’s when I realized the amount of people and how strong our word of mouth got to everybody,” Sonni said. “The whole bridge was from start to finish, people. I feel amazing about that because we did not expect this. We expected it to be close friends and family. It just shows how much–we’re not going to be silenced.” 

From left, Emily Sonni, Madison Barchowski and Karen Barchowski.(© FlaglerLive)
From left, Emily Sonni, Madison Barchowski and Karen Barchowski.(© FlaglerLive)

She spoke of the distinct difference between the Flagler Beach march and Palm Coast’s, what turned into as close as a teach-in as Flagler County has seen: “We wanted to give people the ability to voice how they felt and their experiences, if they had any. That was our main goal, is we wanted to let people use their voice.” After crossing the bridge a second time with the marchers, Flagler Beach Police Chief Matt Doughney said social media had drawn the attention of authorities, “but we work extremely well with Sheriff Staly and his staff,” he said, “so we’ve been working on this since the weekend, and it was a concerted effort between the sheriff’s office and our department. And again, the folks that came out–and I’m really proud of the younger folks that came out–they conducted themselves in a manner that they should really, really be proud of.” Of his reaction to the George Floyd killing, he said: “What happened in Minneapolis was not only criminal, it was hateful, and they need to be held accountable. Any professional police officer knows that their job that they swore to protect, they let their community down.”

Doughney said there’d been no reported issues in connection with the protest.

Being a business owner herself, Karen Barchowski was asked what message she had for fellow-business owners who’d worried about the march’s effects. She paused, took time to answer–almost as long as Canadian Premier Justin Trudeau took when asked about America’s protests, though unlike Trudeau, Barchowski answered directly: “Stop being fearful. Stop being fearful. This is the time when we need to show unity inside of a community, be it a business, be it–just because you’re a business doesn’t mean you should not put your heart out and speak what you believe in, does not mean you should not stand up for injustice. Use your platform. They’re more accountable even than anybody else because, guess what, they have it, they have it, people come there, so what they bring away from there–”

“They’re big tourist destinations,” Sonni says. 

“Exactly,” Barchowski  continues. “What kind of town do we want to be? I want to be a town united. I want to be a town that people come to and say, look at all these businesses that are supporting equality, OK? Supporting black lives. Everyone is welcome, no matter what you are, no matter who you are, you know. It’s an easy talk. But walk it. Walk it. In DeLand, every single store supported. I live in DeLand, I have to commute, but every single store: United. DeLand, United. DeLand, United. They show their support, they were out giving water bottles. Business here shut down because they said we were going to cause violence. It was the fear that was put online of course, with all these people saying this stuff.” 

It’s those messages that are promoting violence, Barchowski  said–the Facebook posters disseminating discriminatory and fearmongering messages about protesters. “So my message is, stop living in fear, come from a place of love, look at your fellow man, and use your platform. Sally’s never shies away. Sally’s will not be silent. Ever.”

Flagler Beach Police Chief walked at the head of the march in both directions. (© Weldon Ryan for FlaglerLive)
Flagler Beach Police Chief walked at the head of the march in both directions. (© Weldon Ryan for FlaglerLive)
(© Weldon Ryan for FlaglerLive)
(© Weldon Ryan for FlaglerLive)
(© FlaglerLive)
black lives matter
(© Weldon Ryan for FlaglerLive)
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Merrill S Shapiro says

    June 4, 2020 at 2:20 pm

    I’ve long been a fan of Sally’s Ice Cream–although not as big a fan as my four grandchildren who live in Jacksonville! Now I see, there is no reason to eat ice cream anywhere else! Standing ovation to Emily Slonni and the Barchowski family. With citizens like these, we can’t help but become an even better, a more righteous, a more just community!

  2. Mike Cocchiola says

    June 4, 2020 at 5:10 pm

    I was there. I marched across the bridge and I was amazed at the number of marchers. I was encouraged by the thumbs up, the honks and the cheers from passing cars. I talked to many of the marchers, including the leader, and I listened and learned. I was moved by their passion.

    I cannot feel all of the pain of our Black citizens because it is beyond my experiences and imagination. But I know that they feel the deep and unrelenting pain of 400 years of oppression and if we don’t face their now seething anger and seek solutions together as a nation we will lose America.

  3. BLM! says

    June 4, 2020 at 7:26 pm

    Thank you to Sally’s for not being afraid! Thanks for all the brave speakers for not being afraid! Thanks for all the protesters for not being afraid! Thanks Tony’s Pizza for your support to all of us with delicious pizza! BLM!!!

  4. Hmmm says

    June 4, 2020 at 9:21 pm

    FOR THOSE WHO DONT GET IT, PLEASE READ…
    I am of Puerto Rican descent with “black” skin. I have been pulled over and forced to lay face first at gun point on the side of roads and I95, multiple times for having a broken rearview, another for follwing a car too close(i wasnt), another for not making a complete stop, another for throwing a cigarette out the window(i didnt). Being followed around stores is normal for me. A few houses on my street were broken into and i was told to my face by neighbors that “it had to be you, cause your black”. Denied into bars and clubs while wear button ups, slacks, and dress shoes because “you look like trouble”. My money has been declined at business and personal levels because they said they dont accept drug money. Stopped and searched walking down a street more than once because “i know you have something on you”. If you cant relate to any of this, your opinions are just that, opinions. You will never know what its like. Im a good person and just accepted this is life, because i cant do anything about it. Everyone is different and their own person, police included. Ignorance has no color, remember that.

  5. Proud says

    June 4, 2020 at 10:32 pm

    God bless the protesters in Flagler County. At Kohls. At Veterans Park. And various other locations around the county since 2017. Peaceful, respectful, engaging their constitutional right of protest. This is how it’s done.

  6. palmcoaster says

    June 5, 2020 at 6:27 am

    Thank you Sheriff Staly and Flagler Beach Police Chief for your support and compassion of these demonstrators against injustice to our country black men, women and also against other minorities and whites sometimes. I have the peace of mind to reside in a county and city were we do not experience police brutality, were we are treated all fair and with respect for human life by our law enforcement. Thank you also to Sally’s ice cream shop owner, her daughter and friend for organizing the peaceful demonstrators.

  7. o2 says

    September 30, 2020 at 2:36 am

    It’s a system that is beneficial to white Americans. Look at this.. not letting African Americans buy houses in certain rich white neighborhoods , red lining which draws red lines on black communities for banks not to make loans to, the justice system being harsher on African Americans, i.e An African American gets arrested for weed they can go to jail for years then have a felony on their record and can’t get a job whereas many white college parties have weed nothing happens ,employment discrimination, an employer will be more inclined to pick a white person than a black person, the police department(obviously), education system not funding black schools. Now the question is, if America is equal how do we have inequality to our own citizens? For 200 years there has been inequality now its time for a change. Im not saying we must be perfect but to live up to the ideals we set and that is “that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights. among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness” This isn’t a fight about blm only but a fight for justice and fairness.

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