The New Tri-State Defender -- December 31, 2020 - January 6, 2020

Page 1

Get TSD news, online anytime at TSDMemphis.com

VOL. 69, No. 53

December 31, 2020 - January 6, 2021

2020

www.tsdmemphis.com

RECKONING!

The year called for individuals and groups of people to account for the COVID-19 pandemic, social unrest and an election cycle unlike any other in the nation’s history. TSD photographers captured much of it. The best photos of 2020 continue on Pages 4-5.

On Wednesday (July 1), a day after Mayor Jim Strickland and Memphis Police Department Director Michael Rallings detailed the city’s response to multiple sets of demands/suggestions/recommendations from protesters, police arrested 17 protesters after they refused to leave an encampment in front of City Hall for about two weeks. City officials said protesters were asked to leave because of construction scheduled to resume Wednesday morning. (Photo: Gary S. Whitlow/GSW Enterprises)

$1.00

My insideout look at a vaccine trial by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

It made perfect sense to me. COVID-19 deaths all over the country have consistently been 60-65 percent African American. (In some cities, it has been as high as 70 percent.) Two FDA-approved vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna are already protecting Dr. Sybil C. millions of healthcare perMitchell sonnel in America. The potential for three actually saving people in the AfriVirus-weary can-American community is something we, ideally, Memphis all desire. Except—there must stay is a strong distrust for vaccines in the African-Amer- on the ican community. safety The third potential vaccourse cine is by Janssen PharPage 9 maceutical Companies, a subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson. A trial study is the last big hurdle before FDA approval. Researchers at St. Jude Research Hospital and the University of Tennessee Health Science are facilitating the trial at St.Jude. Which ever vaccine is administered, medical professionals agree that at least 70 percent of the population must be vaccinated to protect everyone. “We actually need 70-75 percent of the population to be vaccinated,” said Dr. Bruce Randolph, medical director of the Shelby County

SEE VIRUS ON PAGE 2

2020 tests family’s resolve Family of eight sang its way through deadly year by Dr. Sybil C. Mitchell

Special to The New Tri-State Defender

Michael Frazier can remember the day Shelby County Schools shut down this year in a flurry of pandemic closures. “It was a Thursday afternoon, and I was at Fairley High School,” said Frazier. “I was supervisor over the floor techs at Fairley and Hillcrest (both in the Whitehaven area). I was also teaching jazz band at Grad Academy, which is the old Southside High School (in Longview Heights). Every thing kind of stopped, but I never did.” Once schools closed, students and teachers taught and learned virtually, but the custodial staff worked until the normal closing of the school year in May. “Ending the school year like that was emotional for my children,” said Frazier. “I have six at home. There are 10 in all.” Frazier had to make his way from Summer Avenue and Perkins Road, where he lives, to

Michael Frazier and his wife, Sharee, frame a moment with their six children. (Courtesy photo) Fairley High School. “It was really hard because I didn’t have a car, and I worked through May,” Frazier said. “I had to ride the MATA bus all the way Downtown to the terminal and then catch the bus taking me to Fairley. “Sometimes I couldn’t get on the connecting bus because it could only carry 14 (because of pandemic safety protocols). So, I would have to miss that bus, and sometimes two other buses. There were times I had to walk from Midtown back home. But I kept going. I never quit.” Getting through the holiday season could have been just as trying, but the Fraziers kept their children busy and happy with a family singing group. Frazier plays most instruments and his wife, Sharee, sings. The Frazier family brought encouragement and cheer to those on the frontlines of this pandemic.

SEE FRAZIER ON PAGE 2

Evidence response teams from the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives process the scene on Monday (Dec. 28, 2020) of the Christmas Day blast in Nashville. (Photo: FBI/ATF via AP)

Christmas bombing marks another dark day for Nashville

by Kimberlee Kruesi and Bobby Caina Calvan

NASHVILLE – When Sandy and Geff Lee finally saw a photo of the building that was home to their Nashville boutique on the day after the Christmas morning bombing, a quiet came over the room. The rubble was overwhelming. Debris shadowed familiar details. Geff Lee pulled up a map to verify they were looking in the right place. “That moment? It was silence. It was an eye-opener,” Sandy Lee said, owner of Ensemble. “It was blown up.” The Christmas Day explosion has sparked shock across the country after a bomb detonat-

ed in the heart of Nashville’s historic downtown and killed the bomber, injured three other people and damaged dozens of buildings. Yet for those who call Music City home, the bombing feels like a cruel capstone to an already dark year. “It won’t be the same,” Sandy Lee said. “You can’t rebuild that.” In early March, a massive tornado rumbled through the city — uprooting homes, destroying businesses and killing two dozen people. Then the COVID-19 pandemic arrived, shuttering businesses as people stayed home and the virus spread rapidly. Some people who lost their homes in the tornado saw their

SEE BOMB ON PAGE 2


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
The New Tri-State Defender -- December 31, 2020 - January 6, 2020 by The Tri-State Defender - Issuu