About 100 mourners filled the pews of Mt. Neboh Baptist Church in Harlem on Friday to remember Jordan Neely, who was choked to death on a subway train earlier this month.
The Rev. Johnnie Green Jr. started by saying that the ceremony would honor how Neely lived โ not how he died.
A white casket adorned with gold and covered in a heaping bouquet of red and white roses stood before the pews.
The somber service was punctuated by bouts of joyful music, as the pastor and a choir led the mourners in gospel songs. People danced in the pews and clapped along. Between speeches, four young men sang an a cappella rendition of โPeople Get Ready.โ As they crooned about the โtrain to Jordan,โ people in the pews clapped and cheered.
Neelyโs aunt, Mildred Mahazu, said her nephew had idolized Michael Jackson since he was 7 years old, and that he had also been a soccer and basketball star in high school. She said Neely and his mother, who was strangled to death when he was 14, had an โunbreakable bond.โ
But the service was about more than mourning Neelyโs death or celebrating his life. It was also a call to action.
โLet me say as I begin that we should not not celebrate Jordanโs life but we should not ignore how he died,โ the Rev. Al Sharpton said during his eulogy. โThis funeral was not on the schedule. Weโre not here because of natural causes. Weโre here because of unnatural policies.โ
Sharpton called for changes to the systems that allowed Neely to fall through the cracks.
People in the pews rose to their feet and erupted in chants of โNo justice, no peace.โ
Yusef Salaam, a member of the wrongly convicted Central Park Five who is now running for City Council, called Neelyโs killing a โlynching.โ
According to a witness, Neely, 30, was riding an uptown F train through Manhattan when he started shouting that he was hungry, thirsty and tired โ and that he didnโt care if he went to jail or died. At some point after that, another straphanger took…
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