Viral videos show Black Lives Matter protesters confronting diners in Washington, D.C.

Video of Black Lives Matter protesters confronting diners at a Washington, D.C., restaurant went viral Tuesday night and drew backlash online.

The incident, captured by The Washington Post reporter Frederick Kunkle, showed a group of white protesters demanding a woman on a restaurant patio in Adams Morgan raise her first in solidarity. The woman, identified by Kunkle as Lauren B. Victor, refuses as the crowd chanted refrains including "white silence is violence" and "no justice, no peace."

Victor, a 49-year-old urban planner and photographer, told the Post she wasn't frightened and that she had marched in previous Black Lives Matter demonstrations. But, she said in that moment she felt it was wrong for the crowd to surround them and try to coerce them into showing support for the movement.

“I felt like I was under attack,” Victor said. “It just felt overwhelming to have all of those people come at you. To have a crowd – with all that energy – demand that you do this thing. In the moment it didn’t feel right."

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The video shared by Kunkle has nearly 10 million views and drew criticism online. Video from a similar scene shared on Twitter earlier this week appears to show another group confronting a pair of diners seated outside a restaurant in the nation's capitol who also decline to raise their fists.

The demonstration Tuesday evening was one of several that rocked the nation in protest of the police shooting of Jacob Blake in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Two people were killed in Kenosha during protests overnight, and Blake is reportedly paralyzed from the waist down.

Contributing: The Associated Press

Follow N'dea Yancey-Bragg on Twitter: @NdeaYanceyBragg

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Video of Black Lives Matter protest confronting DC diners goes viral