Saturday is Juneteenth, a celebration of the emancipation of enslaved African-Americans.
The date itself is the anniversary of Union Army Gen. Gordon Granger’s June 19, 1865 announcement of General Order No. 3, which proclaimed that Blacks would be free from slavery in Texas. That order came nearly three years after President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation outlawed slavery in the Confederate states.
It is, without question, a celebration — a celebration of the end of one of the most ghastly chapters in American history. Its significance is so great that Congress voted this week to make Juneteenth a federal holiday. President Biden has signed that bill into law.
It also is now an official holiday on the MACPA’s calendar — a time to celebrate the end of slavery, yes, but also to acknowledge the evil that humans are capable of, the justice that has yet to be served, and the systemic American flaws that still exist.
It’s a time to say, “We did this. This is who we were then … but it’s not who we will be tomorrow. And we will do better.”
I hope you’ll join the MACPA team in celebrating the holiday in a way that feels right to you. Here are some ideas:
Learn. Grow. Celebrate. And have a happy Juneteenth.