By Rev. Dorothy S. Boulware, Word in Black

On the grounds of local Target stores from Georgia to California, hundreds of people knelt in prayer on May 25, the fifth anniversary of George Floyd’s murder. For 9 minutes and 29 seconds — the exact length of time former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin knelt on Floyd’s neck — faith leaders across the nation marked a spiritual and economic line in the sand.

Indeed, these prayer vigils were declarations that the economically exploitative relationship in which the Black community spent an average of $12 million a day in Target stores is over.

“Who stood with us 10 toes down on Sunday, outside of Target in prayer, asking God to shift some things and remove some things and bring down whatever is an obstacle to our progress and to our assi

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