By CHRISTINE FERNANDO Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Neither woman could bring themselves to watch the video of George Floyd's final moments, his neck pinned under a Minneapolis police officer's knee. But as their city grieved, Leesa Kelly and Kenda Zellner-Smith found much-needed comfort in the messages of anguish and hope that appeared on boarded-up windows as residents turned miles of plywood into canvases. Now, they're working to save those murals before they vanish. 'These walls speak,' said Zellner-Smith, who said she was too numb to cry after Floyd's killing. 'They're the expressions of communities. We want these feelings, hopes, […]
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