Black NHL Player Receives Death Threats After Raising Fist During National Anthem

With his fist raised high Saturday night, Tampa Bay Lightning player J.T. Brown became the first NHL player to protest police brutality during the national anthem. Suggested Reading Have You Heard of The Tragic Story of Phyllis Hyman, a Beautiful, Soulful Singer Derailed By Her Own Demons? Waiting To Exhale’s 30 Years Later: Where Are…

With his fist raised high Saturday night, Tampa Bay Lightning player J.T. Brown became the first NHL player to protest police brutality during the national anthem.

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After taking action, Brown took to social media to explain and defend his position. The forward also admitted that his gesture had provoked death threats from racist Twitter users.

https://twitter.com/JTBrown23/status/917080562053074945?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

In a note posted on his Twitter account, Brown quoted Martin Luther King Jr. and reiterated that his protest was about โ€œpolice brutality, racial injustice, and inequality.โ€ He also mentioned that heโ€”like Colin Kaepernick before himโ€”had consulted members of the military about his demonstration during the playing of the anthem.

โ€œThere comes a time when you cannot remain silent, hoping and wishing for a change,โ€ wrote the Lightning player.

Brown also wrote that his mentions on social media alone proved why taking a stand was necessary.

โ€œThis is about bringing awareness to the real issue [of police brutality] and not changing the narrative,โ€ Brown said.

โ€œI have received racist remarks and death threats because [people] disagree with me because [of] how I chose to raise awareness,โ€ he said. โ€œWe need to be able to listen to those with an opposing view and talk to one another if [we] want to learn, grow and make change.โ€

As NBC Sports reports, itโ€™s the first known example of an NHL player choosing to protest during the anthemโ€”putting the league behind the NFL, NBA and WNBA, along with womenโ€™s soccer and Major League Baseball. As of 2015, about 5 percent of NHL players were black. Previously, San Jose Sharks forward Joel Ward floated the idea of protesting but opted not to.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=riXYhLk8S2M

Read more at NBC Sports.

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