White people wishing to visit George Floyd Square appeared to be instructed, before entering the protest site, on how they should behave, while staying at "A Sacred Space for Community, Public Grief and Protest', according to a photo of a sign said to be near the entrance to the square, a Fox News reporter tweeted.
The banner contains three inscriptions in bold, comprising general rules for those seeking entrance, calling on people to "enter with reverence, humility, and openness, as an invited guest"; "caring for each other by wearing a mask and asking others to wear a mask"; "honor the space as a place to connect and grieve as caring humans".
The list of ground rules for visitors to the square, however, appeared to contain an added sign in bold - "For White people in particular" - which then adds an extra sublist of instructions which are thought to be applied for white people.
According to the banner, white visitors should "decenter" and "come to listen, learn, mourn, and witness". The sign notes that white people come here "to support, not to be supported".
White people should be "mindful of whether your volume, pace, and movements are supporting or undermining your efforts to decenter yourself".
The banner reminds white people that they should not "take photos of other people without" the latter's consent.
"Consider if you want or need to take photos and post them", the banner reads.
Additionally, according to the added unofficial sign, white people are called to "engage rather than escalate, so that it can be a learning moment rather than a disruption."
According to the Fox News tweet, the banner was not the only one of its kind.
Reacting to the "Sacred Place" set of instructions, Twitter users divided mainly into those pointing out that the rules in the list were a common-sense code of conduct of conduct for any place regardless of race, and others who saw in the sign the return of segregation, while still others decided that the sign was a reminder of what had happened in that location and has nothing to do with segregation.
On Tuesday, a 12-member jury in the trial of Derek Chauvin, a Minnesota police officer who was accused of killing George Floyd in May last year, reached a verdict, finding the former guilty of all of the charges against him. Floyd's killing occurred on 25 May 2020, as he was detained after allegedly using a fake banknote in a local shop.
The officer, Derek Chauvin, knelt on Chauvin's neck for around 10 minutes, which asphyxiated Floyd, who was later pronounced dead in hospital.
The killing sparked nationwide protests against police brutality and police racism that were in some cases characterized by extreme violence, with looting and vandalism of shops and federal buildings, and clashes with police.