The People’s Plaza: Sixty-Two Days of Nonviolent Resistance
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About this ebook
Central to the occupation was Justin Jones, a student of Fisk University and Vanderbilt Divinity School whose place at the forefront of the protests brought him and the occupation to the attention of the Tennessee state troopers, state and US senators, and Governor Bill Lee. The result was two months of solidarity in the face of rampant abuse, community in the face of state-sponsored terror, and standoff after standoff at the doorsteps of the people's house with those who claimed to represent them. In this, his first book, Jones describes those two revolutionary months of nonviolent resistance against a police state that sought to dehumanize its citizens.
The People's Plaza is a rumination on the abuse of power, and a vision of a more just, equitable, anti-racist Nashville—a vision that kept Jones and those with him posted on the plaza through intense heat, unprovoked arrests, vandalism, theft, and violent suppression. It is a first-person account of hope, a statement of intent, and a blueprint for nonviolent resistance in the American South and elsewhere.
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The People’s Plaza - Justin Jones
Introduction
The sixty-two days we spent at the Plaza still feel like a blur.
I spent the weeks after we took down our camp trying to keep my mind occupied, hanging out in nature, and trying not to acknowledge the many emotions I had left in that space we named Ida B. Wells Plaza. The concrete, the steps, the railings, the granite—that physical space will forever be transformed in my mind and, I hope, in the minds of other Nashvillians. They are the physical counterparts to trauma, community, celebration, brutality, resistance, power, purpose, arrest, and rest.
The whirlwind of the summer of 2020 has in some ways passed. I still walk around the house singing the songs and chants we wrote, in call-and-response with myself. On calls with friends I laugh at some of the stories from our summer in the Plaza. In many ways it feels like so long ago, and in others the immediacy could not feel more imminent as court dates approach—reminders that the repercussions of our actions persist.
This whole year has been so long and so short. Time may have passed, but I write from the middle of a storm that is upending foundations all around us. The ongoing global pandemic has made 2020 unprecedented in so many ways; the climate is in chaos as wildfires ravage the West Coast; violent white supremacy is resurfacing emboldened; and our democracy is in crisis with a presidential election just weeks away and a regime that suggests uncertainty about a peaceful transition of power. These are times when the news cycle changes in minutes, a refresh of social media brings new impending peril to light, and there is hardly time to process a long-term response.
I thank you, the reader, for this opportunity to process. It is only in sitting down, reflecting in silence, remembering events as recent as the past few months, that I am accepting my need for healing. What will unfold in the following pages is a story still fresh and suppressed in many ways—the wounds are still raw. The consequences of our fight in the People’s Plaza continue to reverberate. They are far from over.
May this story tell our truth to the community and to future generations. May it translate into the permission, the mandate, the promise to rise up against injustice at the highest levels of authority when others might try to sweep it and you under the rug. May it inspire the conviction to take those initial steps, perhaps in fear, but with the certainty that each of us is connected to a larger movement, a movement that long precedes our own lifetimes and that others will join after us.
Finally, this is my love letter to those dear ones from the Plaza whom I have come to consider my family. You inspire me. This is my attempt to bear witness to our experience at a flash-point in the ongoing struggle. Consider it a tender testament and an unapologetic indictment of where we stand today. Hold it as a reminder that the fight continues, regardless of changing laws and changing lawmakers.
I look forward to the day when young people waiting on public pavement to meet with their governor about racial justice are not arrested, when protests against police brutality are not met with more police brutality. For my children and the generations after, this summer’s actions at Ida B. Wells Plaza were a promise not to let up in the meantime. A promise that a better world is possible. A promise that we will continue putting our bodies on the line and dedicating every tool available to building that world together.
JUSTIN JONES
October 7, 2020
1
We’ve Been Here Before
The spring of 2020 changed a lot of people’s lives.
On March 2 and 3, a tornado outbreak decimated the neighborhood I called home in Nashville. Within a month, the COVID-19 pandemic had changed life as we knew it and laid the groundwork for a summer that would change history in Tennessee.
It was a weird time for everyone. Living alone made it even more isolating. After a couple of months in quarantine, I had finally started to adjust as my life took on a new routine—but I was tired of looking at screens, and I looked increasingly forward to daily neighborhood walks with my dog, Denali.
Staying home was a way to protect not only ourselves, but our neighbors and loved ones, especially those who were elderly and immunocompromised. Governors across the United States called for statewide shutdowns, leaving businesses and their workers struggling or out of work. Forty million people found themselves unemployed and seeking government aid, which came in the form of unemployment (for those lucky enough to get it) and a stimulus check for $1,200.
But while the world came to a halt to flatten the curve,
the threat of racist violence endured, and with gatherings, sports, and entertainment venues closed, we all had a lot more time to keep up with events that might have otherwise been missed in our fast-paced grind culture. Before long, our social media timelines of Zoom screenshots, virtual music battles, and photos of pre-COVID life were being flooded with horrific videos of Black people being murdered for simply existing.
In late February, Ahmaud Arbery was jogging in his Georgia neighborhood when a mob of white vigilantes followed him in their truck, claiming that he was a suspect. They shot him. It was caught on video, and that video went viral. In March, Breonna Taylor was shot by police in her own apartment in Louisville, Kentucky. And on May 25, another graphic video, one that would shift popular American life, spread over every media outlet in the country: a Black man, a father, with his head on the pavement and a knee on his neck, being murdered over the course of almost nine excruciating minutes by a white Minneapolis police officer in broad daylight.
Like many, when I first saw the George Floyd video my first thought was of Eric Garner, another unarmed father killed in the same fashion—choked to death while pleading with the officer, I can’t breathe.
Historically, this type of execution has a name: lynching. Eric Garner and George Floyd were suffocated to death. With his airway being crushed, Floyd died calling out for his mother, unable to breathe not because of the coronavirus, but because of the deep-rooted pandemic of racism.
The video sent a new ripple through Americans’ consciousness of racial justice—a ripple that had been dormant for years in the majority of the population. All across the nation, people sought action that was more than symbolic. The people of Minneapolis, where George Floyd was murdered, took to the streets, outraged by the reality that these lynchings had become routine. A call arose from the grassroots to defund the police—an unfiltered policy demand to stop communities of color from being forced to subsidize the very systems that we saw murder our people day after
