Paddle Out for Justice 2021 

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Mark McKenna
A canoe sits on the shore as people gathered for the second Paddle Out for Justice on the Samoa Peninsula Sunday.
Mark McKenna
In total around 50 people attended the paddle out, stretching along the cove.
Mark McKenna
Participants waiting on the beach for the event to begin.
Mark McKenna
Event Organizer Melissa Meiris addresses the crowd as she kicks off the event.
Mark McKenna
Organizer Melissa Meiris wrote the Wiyot word for justice on the back of her shirt. The paddle out took place on non-ceded Wiyot land on the Samoa Peninsula at an area the Wiyot call Twaya’t.
Mark McKenna
As the attendees prepare to enter the water, Melissa Meiris tells the crowd that it is very important not to enter the bay with money in their pockets so they should put it in the donation jars.
Mark McKenna
Dozens of people entered the water for the paddle out on a variety of non-motorized water craft.
Mark McKenna
Dozens of people entered the water for the paddle out on a variety of non-motorized water craft.
Mark McKenna
The people paddling out were asked to form two concentric circles so they could hear each other.
Mark McKenna
A man paddles a canoe solo back to shore.
Mark McKenna
Paddle boarder Tim Haywood, of Trinidad, said he came to support the causes of the different groups in person.
Mark McKenna
Attendees place flowers on surfboards to take into the bay for the paddle out.
Mark McKenna
A small outrigger canoe is ferried across the sand to the water's edge.
Mark McKenna
Participants listen to the speakers before they hit the water for the paddle out.
Mark McKenna
Event organizer Melissa Meiris’s mother, Sigrid Meadows, records her daughter speaking to the crowd. Meadows said she came out from Colorado to help her daughter.
Mark McKenna
Terry Uyeki with Humboldt Asians & Pacific Islanders (HAPI), spoke of the imprisonment of Japanese Americans, as well as the increase of hate crimes against Asians even before the pandemic.
Mark McKenna
Brieanne Mirjah, who is expecting her first child any day, spoke to the crowd about the Eureka Chinatown project and the contributions Asian Americans have made to build the country, including railroads and electrical lines.
Mark McKenna
Julio Torres spoke of the Josiah Lawson case and other injustices before preforming "Three Chords For The Movement," a song he wrote shortly after the death of Lawson four years ago.
Mark McKenna
Julio Torres addresses the crowd before performing his song.
Mark McKenna
Julio Torres plays "Three Chords For The Movement."
Mark McKenna
Brenda Perez of Centro del Pueblo spoke of issues and challenges facing the Latinx community, including families separated at the border.
Mark McKenna
Brenda Perez, of Centro del Pueblo.
Mark McKenna
Lark Doolan, Humboldt’s first openly transgender school administrator, called on people to disrupt the hate against people of color and other marginalized groups, asking white people to say something with they see racism or other phobias.
Mark McKenna
Paddlers listen to speakers on the sand.
Mark McKenna
Arcata High School Black Student Union President Bella Volz-Broughton told the crowd her parents began explaining to her when she was 4 that people would treat her differently because of the color of her skin.
Mark McKenna
Arcata High Black Student Union President Bella Volz-Broughton addresses the crowd with a Black Lives Matter sign in the background. She will be attending University of California at Berkley next year.
Mark McKenna
Arcata High School Black Student Union President Bella Volz-Broughton.
Mark McKenna
Dozens of people entered the water for the paddle out on a variety of non-motorized water craft.
Mark McKenna
Getting a canoe onto the water for the paddle out.
Mark McKenna
Surfers and paddlers hit the water.
Mark McKenna
After about 30 minutes, the group began to break up as some folks returned to shore while others stayed longer to enjoy the water.
Mark McKenna
Paddlers out on the bay.
Mark McKenna
Kayakers and others on the water for the paddle out.
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Mark McKenna
In total around 50 people attended the paddle out, stretching along the cove.

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