[ad_1]
The stunning image of a Black protestor carrying an injured white man to safety in London has gone viral over the last few days. Now the man captured in that moment has come forward to explain why he did it.
Saturday, the image of Patrick Hutchinson‘s unexpected moment of grace spread across the world. Protestors continue to take to the streets in support of Black Lives Matter, and the numerous injustices that Black people continue to endure at the hands of law enforcement.
READ MORE: ‘Rich Dad’ author’s Black Lives Matter ‘losers’ comment is a betrayal
Sunday, while speaking to CNN, Hutchinson revealed that while this was the first Black Lives Matter protest he’d ever attended, he chose to help the man so that the main focus of the protests wouldn’t be overshadowed by the image of a white person being trampled.
“My real focus was on avoiding a catastrophe, all of a sudden the narrative changes into ‘Black Lives Matters, Youngsters Kill Protesters.’ That was the message we were trying to avoid,” he explained matter of factly.
He went on to recall how he’d first spotted the man lying on the ground in the fetal position while surrounded by protestors and immediately recognized how those optics could be manipulated and used against everyone there.
READ MORE: ‘All Black Lives Matter’ painted in Hollywood street in honor of Pride month
Patrick Hutchinson, the black man seen carrying an injured white man to safety during a chaotic scene at protests in London, tells CNN he did it to avoid catastrophe. https://t.co/nOoTUlg3bb pic.twitter.com/a356nTeq9G
— CNN (@CNN) June 15, 2020
READ MORE: ‘Karen’ calls cops on San Francisco man who stenciled ‘Black Lives Matter’ on his own property
It has not been verified what the injured man was doing at the protest or how he got hurt, but when Hutchinson saw the man, his friends formed a shield around him as he scooped him up to take him directly to the police.
“I am carrying him, my friends are protecting myself and the man on my shoulder. He was still receiving blows, you can feel people trying to hit him,” he said. “There were people trying to protect him at the same time carried him over to the police and I said here you are. One of them said ‘thank you – you did a good thing there.’”
“I want to see equality for everybody. I am a father, a grandfather and I would love to see my young children, my young grandchildren, my nieces, my nephews have a better world than I have lived in,” he concluded. “The world I live in has been better than my grandparents and my parents and hopefully we can continue until we have total equality for everyone.”
Have you subscribed to theGrio’s new podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!
[ad_2]
Source link