NYPD officers Rafael Ramos and Wenjian Liu.
Tens of thousands of police from cities across the United
States filled a New York City church and nearby streets on Saturday at
the funeral for one of two police officers shot by a man who said he was
avenging the killing of unarmed black men by police.
Mid-way through one of the most heavily attended funerals in the New
York Police Department’s history, New York City Mayor Bill de
Blasio walked past U.S. Vice President Joe Biden and other dignitaries
to give his eulogy for Officer Rafael Ramos.
As the mayor started speaking, thousands of uniformed officers
outside silently turned their backs on him in a pointed display of
protest as his image filled the large screens broadcasting the service.
Angered by the mayor’s qualified support for nationwide
demonstrations against the deaths of unarmed black men at the hands of
police, some New York police officers had similarly shunned de Blasio as
he arrived a week ago at the hospital where Ramos and his police
partner, Wenjian Liu, were declared dead.
“He believed in protecting others,” de Blasio said as he stood behind
Ramos’ coffin, which was bathed in blue light, “and those who are
called to protect others are a special breed.”
Singled out for their uniforms, the slaying of Ramos, 40, and Liu,
32, as they sat in their patrol car has become a rallying point for
police and their supporters around the United States, beleaguered by
months of street protests accusing police of racist practices.
Offering a counter-narrative to the anti-police chants at many
protests, Vice President Biden made the first of several speeches that
touched on the marked increase in the racial diversity of the city’s
police force, which only a few decades ago was almost entirely white.
“I believe that this great police force of this incredibly diverse
city can and will show the nation how to bridge any divide,” Biden said
during the service at Christ Tabernacle Church in the suburban Queens
neighbourhood in which Ramos lived with his wife, Maritza, and their two
teenage sons.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said the department had officers who
had migrated to New York City from more than 50 different nations and
included speakers of 64 languages. He went on to criticise some of the
protesters who have held rallies in the city on a nearly daily basis.
“The NYPD protected the right of free speech even though they
themselves were the targets of false and abusive tirades by some,” he
said.
SORROW MIXED WITH ANGER
Streets outside the church were filled for blocks with neat, quiet
crowds of officers in blue uniform, including delegations
from Boston, Atlanta, St. Louis and New Orleans. A police spokesman said
the department did not estimate the number of people who attended
department funerals, but Biden said some 25,000 people were thought to
have come.
Before joining the police department relatively late in his career,
Ramos had worked as a school safety officer. A regular face as an usher
at Christ Tabernacle, he had nearly completed a course to become a
police chaplain.
Bill Bratton, the city’s police commissioner, said during the service that he had posthumously appointed Ramos to the position.
Relatives and close friends of Ramos, many of whom knew him as Ralph,
recalled him as a man devoted to his church and to calling the people
he loved frequently just to see how they were.
The officers’ killer, Ismaaiyl Brinsley, 28, fatally shot himself
soon after the attack, and had earlier that same day shot and wounded
his former girlfriend in Baltimore.
Brinsley, who was black, had written online that he wanted to kill
police to avenge the deaths of Eric Garner and Michael Brown - unarmed
black men killed by white policemen in New York and Ferguson, Missouri.
Their deaths and the decisions not to prosecute the officers
responsible ignited nationwide protests, renewing a debate about race
in America that has drawn in President Barack Obama.
Ramos’ family has said it welcomed the mayor at the funeral, but many
of those outside who did not turn their backs on him said they
sympathized with the gesture.
“A lot of people feel he has taken a side, and that side is not
ours,” a New York policeofficer said on condition that her name not be
used because officers are not allowed to talk to reporters without
clearance.
Patrick Lynch, president of the city’s Patrolmen’s Benevolent
Association, said a week ago at the hospital where Liu and Ramos were
taken that the mayor had “blood on his hands.”
“We have to understand the betrayal that they feel,” Lynch, in an
interview outside the church with CNN, said of the officers who turned
their backs. “The feeling is real, but today is about mourning. Tomorrow
is about debate.”
(Editing by Mark Heinrich and Dan Grebler)
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