Many who gathered yesterday in Union Square brandished signs bearing a portrait of Martin and some, despite the sweltering July heat, wore "hoodie" sweatshirts, as the 17-year-old did the night he was killed in February 2012.
"I am appalled," said Carli VanVoorhis, a 21-year-old hairdresser.
"The man was armed, the kid was not, and the man with the gun got away," she said. "If we say it was not a racial issue, we would be lying."
One sign demanded to "Jail racist killers, not black youth," while many others declared "We are all Trayvon. The whole damn system is guilty."
"We have a big problem with race, and another problem is guns," said one speaker, Rodney Rodriguez.
"If Zimmerman didn't have a gun, he couldn't have killed Trayvon Martin."
Another protester, Derreck Wilson, 46, said the group had come "to say in a peaceful way why we are angry. We are angry, scared and anxious."
"We all have the same desires. I want to be able to have my son to come home," added Wilson, who came to the protest from the traditionally African-American neighborhood of Harlem.
Rhada Blank also came from Harlem with friends.
When the verdict was announced, she said she thought about leaving the United States permanently.
"I was sick to my stomach when I heard the verdict, I felt ashamed," she said. "I don't feel good about being American today. I think we have a lot of work to do."
"As far as people think we've gone, with the decision of electing (President Barack) Obama, this verdict shows we haven't moved beyond race," said the former teacher who now writes for the theater.
The case has, since the beginning pitted those who think the 29-year-old neighborhood watchman -- son of a white father and a Peruvian mother -- killed Martin in self-defense, and those who think it was a murder sparked by racist assumptions.
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