“Someone named George Floyd died in Minneapolis, Mom…he was black,” says my 11-year-old son Akaash. I look up from my computer wondering what“black” even means to him. In his homogenous existence, delineated only by the rich and poor lines of Mumbai’s blue slums and covered shanties, the only ethnic variations he saw were between Gujarati, Punjabi, Bengali, Marwari, Parsi or Muslim classmates who were either light or dark-skinned. “They knelt on his neck so hard he died Mama,” Akaash continues. “His last words were – ‘I can’t breathe.’”. His voice trails. I immediately know he’s referring to police brutality against a black man George Floyd.