Advertisement

Brothers fighting white supremacy after mom killed in racist Buffalo attack

Brothers fighting white supremacy after mom killed in racist Buffalo attack

As Black children growing up in Buffalo, Garnell and Raymond Whitfield recalled "the talk" their mother repeatedly had with them. It wasn't just about how to act around police officers, it was also about how to conduct themselves in stores.

"Before we ever went into a store, we got instructions: Don't touch anything, stay with me," Garnell Whitfield Jr., the retired Buffalo fire commissioner, told ABC News. "We'd go into stores and be followed, treated as if we were there to steal."

Even at checkout counters, their mother, Ruth Whitfield, who was born and raised in Mississippi during the Jim Crow era, was confronted with racism in Buffalo, they said.

MORE: 'My life was destroyed': Survivors, loved ones struggle a year after Buffalo shooting

ADVERTISEMENT

"Lots of times, the people behind the counter, they wouldn't want to make contact with you. So, they would put your change on the counter, would try not to give you a bag," Garnell Whitfield said. "All those little things that maybe people didn't pay attention to, my mother paid attention to."

PHOTO: Ruth Whitfield (Courtesy of Whitfield Family)
PHOTO: Ruth Whitfield (Courtesy of Whitfield Family)

MORE: Buffalo: Healing from Hate

Ironically, they said, despite being mindful of everyday bigotry inherent in American society, their mother was murdered by a white supremacist while shopping in a grocery store.

In the aftermath of the racially motivated rampage a year ago this week at a Tops market on Buffalo's predominantly Black east side that claimed the lives of their mother and nine other Black people, the brothers founded the nonprofit organization, Pursuit of tRuth. Their mission, they said, is to fight a current rise in white supremacy across the nation and the whitewashing of African American history by bringing together groups that are tackling the issues.

"It's in honor of our mother and her innate ability to forgive and go on giving. That's what we're trying to do," Raymond Whitfield told ABC News.

PHOTO: Garnell Whitfield (left) and his brother, Raymond Whitfield, whose mother, Ruth Whitfield was killed in the May 14, 2022, mass shooting at a Tops store in Buffalo, discuss plans a seminar they held in April on combating white supremacy. (Alysha Webb/ABC News)
PHOTO: Garnell Whitfield (left) and his brother, Raymond Whitfield, whose mother, Ruth Whitfield was killed in the May 14, 2022, mass shooting at a Tops store in Buffalo, discuss plans a seminar they held in April on combating white supremacy. (Alysha Webb/ABC News)

They launched their organization with a three-day conference in late April at SUNY Buffalo State University that drew experts and activists from around the globe, including Alice Wairimu, the U.N. special adviser on the prevention of genocide.

MORE: A year after racist shooting rampage, Buffalo struggles to correct decades of segregation and systemic racism

Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown, who was elected the first Black mayor of the city in 2006, called the Whitfield family "courageous" for hosting a "very important conversation" for a community still reeling from the racist store attack that occurred 10 blocks from his home.

PHOTO: Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown delivers remarks at the Fights For You rally at the National Urban League conference on July 20, 2022, in Washington D.C. (Brian Stukes/Getty Images)
PHOTO: Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown delivers remarks at the Fights For You rally at the National Urban League conference on July 20, 2022, in Washington D.C. (Brian Stukes/Getty Images)

"I think it was even more meaningful that the conference was held by the family members of someone whose life was taken in the 5/14 act of domestic terrorism, the mass shooting perpetrated by a white supremacist," Brown told ABC News.

'Cancer of white supremacy'

Following the May 14, 2022, shooting, the Whitfield family decided to do whatever they could to ensure their mother and the nine others who were murdered did not die in vain.

Less than a month after burying his mother, Garnell Whitfield appeared before the Senate Judiciary Committee, giving emotional testimony and putting the elected leaders on the spot.

"Is there nothing that you personally are willing to do to stop the cancer of white supremacy and the domestic terrorism that it inspires?" he asked the committee members. "Because if there is nothing, then respectfully senators, you should yield your positions of authority and influence to others that are willing to lead on this issue. The urgency of the moment demands no less."

MORE: Survivors say Buffalo's history of segregation and racial tensions linked to Tops shooting

In the days after the shooting, the Senate blocked debate on the Domestic Terrorism Prevention Act. The legislation passed the House days earlier.

The number of reported hate crimes in the United States has been on a steady rise since at least 2015, when white supremacist Dylann Roof fatally shot nine Black parishioners at the Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, South Carolina.

MORE: Buffalo shooting: Remembering the 10 lives taken a year ago in Tops massacre

In 2017, the FBI reported 7,175 hate crimes, a 17% jump from the previous year. That same year, avowed neo-Nazi James Fields Jr. deliberately rammed his car into a crowd of people counter-protesting a "Unite the Right" white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, killing Heather Heyer and injuring numerous others. Fields received life sentences on both state and federal charges.

PHOTO: Several hundred white nationalists and white supremacists carrying torches march in a parade through the University of Virginia campus in Charlottesville, Va., Aug. 11, 2017. (Evelyn Hockstein/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
PHOTO: Several hundred white nationalists and white supremacists carrying torches march in a parade through the University of Virginia campus in Charlottesville, Va., Aug. 11, 2017. (Evelyn Hockstein/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

In 2021, the number of hate crimes nationwide rose 12% from the previous year to 10,840 and 64.5% of the 12,411 victims were targeted because of their race, the FBI reported. In 2022, white supremacist propaganda in the United States, including the mass distribution of flyers, soared to a record high with 6,751 incidents reported, an increase of 38% from the previous year, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

Payton Gendron, the teenage gunman in the Buffalo massacre, pleaded guilty to committing the murders and was sentenced in February to life in prison without the possibility of parole. He also became the first person in New York state to face a charge of domestic terrorism motivated by hate, for which he also pleaded guilty.

MORE: Buffalo supermarket shooter pleads guilty to terrorism and murder charges

During his sentencing hearing, the 19-year-old Gendron, from predominantly white Conklin, New York, a three-hour drive from Buffalo, claimed he was brainwashed by online racist propaganda, saying, "I believed what I read online and acted out of hate."

Preserving the history of Buffalo attack

Besides tackling the issue of white supremacy, Garnell Whitfield said he and his brother started their organization to prevent the history of the supermarket mass shooting from being whitewashed.

PHOTO: Garnell Whitfield Jr. has dedicated his life to fighting white supremacy in honor of his 86-year-old mother, Ruth Whitfield, who was killed in the Tops massacre on May 14, 2022. (Malik Rainey for ABC News)
PHOTO: Garnell Whitfield Jr. has dedicated his life to fighting white supremacy in honor of his 86-year-old mother, Ruth Whitfield, who was killed in the Tops massacre on May 14, 2022. (Malik Rainey for ABC News)

"One of the things we want to make sure happens is that history is recorded accurately and preserved, not just for this moment in time, but for future generations," he told ABC News, noting that in some parts of the nation, books on African American history are being removed from library shelves and African American studies are being banned from schools.

MORE: 'Hurts': Loved ones of Buffalo massacre victims brace for Mother's Day a year after shooting

He said one of the reasons he and his brother partnered with SUNY Buffalo State University is because it is the largest producer of teachers in New York state.

Nearly 30% of the 5,464 undergraduate students at Buffalo State are Black, the highest of any school in the State University of New York system, according to the school's website.

"But in talking to them, they talked about their frustration of not being able to reach outside the world of academia, how they share papers and ideas within their world," Garnell Whitfield said. "They haven't had a whole lot of impact and not a lot of participation in the Africana studies program. If teachers aren't being taught that, how can we teach the students?"

Moving forward, he said he plans to use the inaugural event of his organization as a springboard to unite people in his cause.

PHOTO: Kimberly Johnson, of Buffalo, places her hand on a photo of the late Hayward Patterson, at makeshift memorial across the street from the scene of a mass shooting at Tops Friendly Market, May 19, 2022 in Buffalo, New York. (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
PHOTO: Kimberly Johnson, of Buffalo, places her hand on a photo of the late Hayward Patterson, at makeshift memorial across the street from the scene of a mass shooting at Tops Friendly Market, May 19, 2022 in Buffalo, New York. (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

"I'm interested in how we take advantage of the relationships we forged at the conference and coalesce around some actionable steps that we might be able to pursue," Garnell Whitfield said.

MORE: 6 months after Buffalo massacre, some survivors say time has done little to heal

He said he was inspired by the keynote speaker at his conference, Jelani Cobb, the dean of the department of journalism at Columbia University.

During his speech, Cobb said the Buffalo attack was "predictable," tied to a "terrible logic that has replayed itself throughout our history."

"I believe that the battle over our future begins in the past," Cobb said. "But first we have to diligently and with great determination and resolve, refuse the attempts to redecorate history, such as to make it more appealing to individuals who never believed in our humanity in the first place."

Brothers fighting white supremacy after mom killed in racist Buffalo attack originally appeared on abcnews.go.com