Johnetta "Netta" Elzie (born April 16, 1989) is an American civil rights activist. She is one of the leaders in the activist group We The Protesters and co-edits the Ferguson protest newsletter This Is the Movement with fellow activist DeRay Mckesson.
Early life
Elzie grew up in North County St. Louis, where her mother owned a hair salon.[1] Elzie attended Our Lady of Good Counsel, a private school where she was often the only black student in her class.[2] She then studied journalism[3] in college at Southeast Missouri State.[1]
Civil rights activism
Elzie became involved in activism following the shooting of Michael Brown. On August 9, 2014, via Twitter, Elzie learned of Brown's death and that his body was left for hours in the street a short distance from her own childhood home. Mourning the recent death of her own mother, Elzie drove to the site of Brown's death and began tweeting about the scene she encountered.[1] She became involved in protests[4] and in organizing volunteers and donations, as well as in continuing to document events;[5] in his book They Can't Kill Us All, Washington Post reporter Wesley Lowery described Elzie as "the most prominent of the citizen journalists telling the story of Ferguson."[2]
The Los Angeles Times has named Elzie to its list of "The new civil rights leaders: Emerging voices in the 21st century." The New York Times profiled Elzie and McKesson as leaders of the group that built "the nation's first 21st-century civil rights movement."[3] In January 2015 The Atlantic named her one of the leaders of the Black Lives Matter Movement.[5]
Elzie uses social media outlets such as Twitter in her activism.
She has been a field organizer for Amnesty International, and has volunteered with a girls' group called the Sophia Project in St. Louis.[9]
Honors
Elzie and McKesson were awarded the Howard Zinn Freedom to Write Award from the New England branch of PEN in 2015 for their activism.[10][7]
They were also named as two of the 53 people on Fortune's 2015 list of "World’s Greatest Leaders."[11]
^ abLowery, Wesley (2016). "They Can't Kill Us All": Ferguson, Baltimore and a New Era in America's Racial Justice Movement. New York: Little, Brown. p. 39. ISBN978-0-316-31247-9.