Saturday will mark 10 years since Trayvon Martin, a Black teenager from Miami, was shot and killed while walking back to his dad's place from a 7-Eleven in Sanford.
His killing by neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman -- who ultimately was not convicted -- led to protests across the country.
Many say his case started the Black Lives Matter Movement.
On Feb. 5, Trayvon Martin's parents -- Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton -- led a rally in Miami. Fulton spoke forcefully from the stage, and Tracy Martin talked about their son on what would have been his 27th birthday.
He 'galvanized' the country
Trayvon Martin's death is always going to be heartbreaking, his father said. "His departure from life leaves an emptiness that, you know, it's hard to fill. I don't think that that void would ever be filled.
"His story is written, Trayvon is in the history books. ... Just knowing that he galvanized the country and that he's etched in the fabric of America, it means a lot. I think that, you know, he's brought awareness. Certainly, he's opened up the eyes of many people with injustices that occur in pockets that we don't really know about."
Resting in power
Fulton said Trayvon Martin is resting in power as a symbol for victims of racial injustice.
"My son," she said, "is the voice and sometimes the face for so many other Trayvon Martins that you don't know."
And in response, Fulton is trying to do her part, she said. "If you really want to support Trayvon Martin and all our young people, knowing that our children's lives matter. Then just do your part. Do your part. That's all I ask."
A proud father
Tracy Martin remembered his son as fun-loving and outgoing.
"He really loved his family," Martin said. "He used to love riding motorcycles, on dirt bikes, skateboards. going skating. He used to love all of that.
"And just just seeing him, you know, just planting the seed and watching that seed grow, watching him go from, you know, 4- or 5-, 6-year-old kid to a 10-, 11-year-old kid to 17-year-old young man -- teen -- just watching him grow into this it made me a proud dad. ... This was a great kid whose life was taken away from us."
Martin sees some "traction" in the fight for racial justice.
"But we still got a long way to go," he said. "And it's going take, it's going take more than one community to make change. It's going to take a diversified community. It's going to take all of us to work together."