The  rest of the country knows George Floyd from several minutes of cell  phone footage captured during his final hours. But in Houston’s Third  Ward, they know Floyd for how he lived for decades—a mentor to a  generation of young men and a “person of peace” ushering ministries into  the area.
 
Before moving to Minneapolis for a job opportunity  through a Christian work program, the 46-year-old spent almost his  entire life in the historically black Third Ward, where he was called  “Big Floyd” and regarded as an “OG,” a de-facto community leader and  elder statesmen, his ministry partners say.
 Floyd 
spoke  of breaking the cycle of violence he saw among young people and used  his influence to bring outside ministries to the area to do discipleship  and outreach, particularly in the Cuney Homes housing project, locally  known as “the Bricks.”
 “George Floyd was a person of peace sent from the Lord  that helped the gospel go forward in a place that I never lived in,”  said Patrick PT Ngwolo, pastor of Resurrection Houston, which held  services at Cuney.
 “The platform for us to reach that neighborhood and the  hundreds of people we reached through that time and up to now was built  on the backs of people like Floyd,” he told 
Christianity Today.