A rare progressive protest in the middle of conservative Yorba Linda
Biola Macaulay, 26, said she teared up a little bit when she walked up to Tuesdayâs Yorba Linda protest surrounding the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis, which started on Main Street and ended around the fountain of the pristine Yorba Linda Town Center, which just opened last year.
The protest started at 4 p.m. with about 500 people lining the corner of Main Street and Imperial Highway, but a couple hundred protesters were still gathered around the fountain a couple hours later. It was a multigenerational and multicultural crowd. After moments of silence, chanting and taking the knee, the organizers allowed anyone who wanted to speak to take their turn at the microphone.
For the record:
1:36 p.m. June 6, 2020A previous version of the story stated Macaulay was in touch with Councilwoman Tara Campbell, but it was Mayor Beth Haney.
âI was pleasantly surprised to see how many people showed up today,â said Macaulay, who is a lawyer. âI grew up in Yorba Linda, and I honestly did not think that this many people cared about black people or us dying. Which is really sad to say, but that has honestly been my experience growing up here.â
At that moment, a truck with two Trump banners circled the plaza to taunt the protesters, who threw up their middle fingers and screamed âGo the [expletive] homeâ and âGet out of your [expletive] car, you coward.â
âPeople like that is what Iâve grown up with,â said Macaulay, gesturing at the men driving by. âThatâs why I didnât expect to see this.â
A 2018 Sacramento Bee study rated Yorba Linda as the most conservative large city in California, based on the number of voters registered with conservative parties. Itâs the home of Richard Nixon and his presidential library. The population is about 60% white and 1.3% African American.
The day before, Caleigh Cobb, 21, who is white and was born and raised in Yorba Linda, heard there were six people protesting on Yorba Lindaâs Main Street. Cobb, who just graduated from Arizona State University, thought, âWe can do better than that.â
She and her friend, Malia Green, who is black and Latina and from Placentia, organized another protest together. They are graduates of El Dorado High School, so they spread the word through their friends and on social media.
She said she would have been happy with 50 protesters. She was floored by the turnout.
It wasnât the typical place for a protest. The backdrop included stores like Club Pilates, Lash Lounge and Clean Juice. As one protester listed the names of the black men who have died from police brutality, a Michael BublĂŠ song happened to play over the plazaâs speakers.
Business owners on Main Street kept watch in front of their stores in case there was any trouble. Several helicopters circled the area, and the police patrolled, but the O.C. Sheriffâs office confirmed on Wednesday that although there was verbal sparring with a few counterprotesters, there were no arrests or injuries reported.
âItâs a privilege for us to be able to have a peaceful protest here,â Cobb said.
She arrived early to try and assure business owners of their good intentions. She was in contact with the sheriffâs office and Mayor Beth Haney.
âI really just wanted to let people speak,â she said. âThis is a very rich, majority-white community, and itâs easy to live in a bubble. I wanted to give a voice to people of color in the area to share their experiences and say, âThis happened here. This isnât something that happened somewhere else. This happened to me here.ââ
Bobby Srivastav, of Yorba Linda, was moved by a black mother who spoke about how scared she is for her children.
He, like many in the crowd, was surprised to hear there would be a protest in Yorba Linda.
He saw the crowd while driving home from work and wanted to bring his son and niece.
Srivastav is the fourth-generation owner of Bobbyâs English Tack, a provider of bridles and halters for equestrians that was started in 1880 by his great-grandfather in India. His great-grandfather was the official supplier for the horses for the British government when it held rule over India, he explained, and now the family business is based in Brea.
He came to the U.S. from India when he was 3 and moved to Brea when he was in fifth grade. He said he faced racism growing up in the area.
âItâs gotten a lot better,â he said, âbut what happened to George Floyd is unbelievably sickening, and this needs to change ⌠Itâs what you teach your kids at the end of the day. If people are going to teach hate, the kids are going to learn hate until they figure it out for themselves or sometimes they donât figure it out at all.
âAnd I think in this day and time, itâs more fear,â he continued. âPeople are more afraid, thatâs why they hate because they canât understand and have an open mind.â
Gisela and Arin Kelman, from Yorba Linda, brought their young daughters, who sat on top of their shoulders, holding signs. They had made four of them: âBlack Lives Matter,â âSilence is Violence,â âPolice the policeâ and âRacism is the Real Pandemic.â
Gisela Kelman hoped for a peaceful protest.
âI went with my mother instinct and thought, we will go and see how it is, do what we need to do, support the cause, and if we donât think itâs safe enough, then we will go back home,â she said.
She was happy to see that it was a safe space, with other children in attendance.
âThey need to see it,â Gisela Kelman said, referring to her children. âBecause they need to take it to school with them and they need to take it to the park with them.â
âItâs to set an example for them that everyone should be treated equally,â said Arin Kelman. âIn the United States of America, we have the expression âpeace and justice for all,â and there isnât justice for all ⌠Itâs important for them to realize that and for them to carry forward the message that everyone should be treated equally.â
While others were protesting, Placentia resident Jay Kim-Turner walked around handing people masks.
He just finished his first year at UC Berkeley but was home early because of COVID-19. In April, he and seven of his friends, many of them from Valencia High School, started a GoFundMe called Masked Heroes Initiative, where theyâve raised $1,355 so far in order to buy masks to donate to local hospitals.
Since the protests started last weekend, heâs been bringing the masks to hand out at protests.
âSince George Floyd happened, social distancing has gone out the window,â he said. âWhile itâs everyoneâs right to protest, and I think itâs necessary to demand justice, at the same time, we canât forget that coronavirus still exists. We need to still stay focused, so Iâm just trying to make sure I do my part to make sure everyone protests just a little bit safer.â
Kim-Turnerâs adopted father is African American, and heâs had a family member that he feels got a severe jail sentence that did not fit the crime.
He said he was also surprised that there was a protest in Yorba Linda, but he thinks that âthis is more than just politics. This is about decent humane treatment.â
Macaulay and her friends decided to leave when they saw the cars with Trump banners driving by. They didnât want to risk being around just in case things got tense.
But before she left, she said, âSeeing this many people out here of all colors is really inspiring, thereâs obviously a lot that needs to be done, but the fact that people are willing to show up, I think is really telling and very beautiful.â
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