‘Don’t ever give up.’ Trayvon Martin’s mother speaks on the 10th anniversary of his death
By Emma Tucker and Laura Studley, CNN
Ten years to the day that 17-year-old Trayvon Martin was killed, his mother Sybrina Fulton’s message was one of hope.
“If you don’t do anything else, don’t give up. That’s my message, don’t ever give up. Ten years later, and I’m still standing strong,” Fulton said at a Saturday morning event in New York City accompanied by Mayor Eric Adams, the Rev. Al Sharpton, City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams and other city leaders.
Fulton shared the pain of losing her son on February 26, 2012. Martin, a Black high school student, was fatally shot by 28-year-old George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch captain in Sanford, Florida, where the teenager was visiting his father.
“So, a lot of people talk about Trayvon Martin’s story. It’s not a story for me, it’s a tragedy, because the story has a beginning and an ending. There is no ending for what I carry in my heart,” Fulton said.
Martin was walking back to the home of his father’s fiancée after buying a snack from a nearby 7-Eleven when he encountered Zimmerman, who called 911 to report a “suspicious person” in the neighborhood.
Zimmerman was told not to get out of his SUV or approach the person, but he disregarded the instructions and followed Martin, who was unarmed. An altercation took place and Martin was fatally shot.
Zimmerman was charged with murder in Martin’s death but he was acquitted at trial after claiming self-defense. The gunshot came from Zimmerman’s handgun and the bullet went into the teen’s left chest and lodged there.
“When you carry a child for nine months and you see your heart walking outside of your body, you never lose that love,” Fulton said at the event on Saturday. “And I repeat all the time, not even the death of my son will separate me from the love of my son, and I mean that.
“And so, I just want to say of course today is a bittersweet day. I thank God for all the Trayvon Martins that you don’t know,” she continued. “All the young ladies who have been shot and killed and our Black and brown boys who have been shot and killed and you don’t know their names. Thank you for standing up for them.”
During the gathering, Adams spoke about the tragic and widespread impact of Martin’s death and stressed the importance of continuing the fight for equality.
“We need to stand our ground as we fight for all the issues that we have known have historically impacted our communities,” Adams said. “There is no tragedy in the mind of so many when a 17-year-old Black boy is killed, but we must stand our ground and say it does matter.
“We must stand our ground as we fight to ensure that we don’t continue to see these laws that are put in place and define people based on their gender, their ethnicity, based on their lifestyle, and who they are,” Adams continued.
Fulton marked the anniversary by imploring community efforts to hold people accountable for the death of their loved ones.
“It’s certainly a blessing to be here, but we have to continue to hold people accountable for killing our loved ones,” she said. “We have to continue to support our children, our families, we have to continue. We can’t give up, we’ve come too far.”
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