This particular National holiday’s origin story began
in 1865, in Galveston, Texas, which was at that time the western-most area of
the Union, when Union soldiers arrived to tell the enslaved people of their emancipation
on June 19, 1865.
Now, those enslaved people had technically already been
freed two-and-a-half years earlier when President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation
Proclamation, but slaveholders in Texas kept the information to themselves,
extending the period of violent exploitation of enslaved African Americans for
two more years.
But in 1865 the news spread: freedom. And the following
year, in 1866, a celebration was had in Texas on that same date, June 19th
… Juneteenth … to finally recognize freedom from slavery in the United States.
Of course, here we are in 2023, one-hundred-fifty-eight
years later, and we know African-Americans still aren’t entirely free; think of
George Floyd and Trayvon Martin and Tamir Rice and Eric Garner and Breonna
Taylor and Michael Brown and Freddie Gray and on and on we could go …
We still have much work to do to free all Americans,
of every race and color and gender and sexual orientation.
We need to free People of Color from the abuses of police
and the criminal justice system and some in our own government that work to deny
them the right to vote.
We need to free Women from having the government control
their bodies.
We need to free Educators to teach American history,
all of it, even the ugly parts.
We need to free Parents to be able to raise their own children
as they see fit; to let their children read the books of their choosing; to let
the parents make healthcare choices for their own children.
We need to free our Trans Brothers and Sisters to live their
lives as they identify; to be fully themselves.
We need to free the LGBTQ+ population from continued harassment
and violence by rightwing agitators and politicians trying to turn the clock
back to the closet.
We are, none of us, free, until we are all free, and there
is still work to be done. |
"We are, none of us, free, until we are all free, and there is still work to be done."
ReplyDeleteI don't think there's more to say here...
Happy Juneteenth!
Also, fuck Texas.
XOXO
You've said it all for me.
ReplyDeleteAmen.
ReplyDeleteVery well said!
ReplyDeleteSee .. even when you go back to the 1800s Texas was still a pain in the ass. It amazes me how many people still don't know about this holiday. All the more reason to keep the education going.
ReplyDeletethe dog's mother
ReplyDeleteHistory, real true history, always
good to know.
xoxo :-)
As bad as things sometimes seem to be, I do think we're marching the long, slow march of progress. When I was a kid I never even heard of Juneteenth. How great that it has become such a cultural force, and long past time!
ReplyDeleteBravo!
ReplyDeleteSadly, until those with privilege are willing to share, and those who fear those who aren't like them, the progress will continue to be slower than it need to be.
ReplyDeleteRight on!
ReplyDeleteIf the last few years have taught us nothing else, this remains an ongoing process. It will never be finished. Our job is to continue to be vigilant and resist the efforts of those who do not recognize or respect the dignity of every human being.
ReplyDeleteWill Jay
Happy Juneteenth, Bob. Wonderful post and thanks for sharing all of that. Keep fighting the good fight.
ReplyDeleteThere is so much silence from the Right today.
ReplyDelete