Destiny Johnson stood across the street from Cup Foods in Minneapolis on Friday, facing a mural dedicated to George Floyd and other black Americans who have died at the hands of police.
And the 30-year-old evangelist had no trouble getting the crowd with her.
"This [stuff] isn't about rioting! This isn't about looting! We want what's right for our people!" she shouted, her voice rising.
Words poured out as bystanders clapped and cheered for the impromptu sermon at the shrine at 38th St. and S. Chicago Avenue where Floyd was killed Monday during an encounter with former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, who hours later was charged with murder and manslaughter.
"This goes way back! This is about 400 years of inequality!" Johnson thundered. "People asking what we want? There ain't no question about what we want!
"We want what's right! And until we get it, ain't gonna be no peace!"
The emotionally charged yet nonviolent scene was a stark contrast to the night before, when rioters drove Minneapolis police out of the Third Precinct headquarters and set the building on fire.
But both are part of the same picture, residents say: The plight of a minority community that for too long has felt oppressed and voiceless, now spurred to action by a brutal and public death.