Blacks shouldn't have to lose identity to promote Juneteenth events (2024)

Controversy in Greenville, South Carolina, shows we're still learning how to honor an event that was only made a federal holiday two years ago

James E. CauseyMilwaukee Journal Sentinel

Editor's Note: This column was updated with a clarification. The Emancipation Proclamation freed slaves in states that seceded from the union. Slavery was abolished in the United States when the 13th Amendment to the Constitution was ratified in December 1865.

Juneteenth is my favorite holiday. It’s the oldest known commemoration of the end of slavery in America and often brings people together who have not seen each other in years.

Blacks celebrate Juneteenth because it symbolizes the end of African Americans being treated as property while being physically and mentally abused by whites for free labor. The first slave ships docked in Jamestown, Virginia, in August of 1619. The last known slave ship arrived in Alabama in 1860. Slavery on U.S. soil spanned over 240 years.

While Juneteenth is a celebration, it is also a day of paying homage to the ancestors who lost their lives while shackled, chained, and stacked on top of one another in slave ships that crossed the Atlantic Ocean. Those who did not survive the crossing were discarded into the sea.

As Juneteenth approaches Monday, a recent controversy in Greenville, South Carolina, shows we're still learning how to fully honor an event that was only made a federal holiday two years ago. Event organizers apologized in May after featuring a white couple on an advertising banner promoting "Juneteenth, An Upstate Celebration of Freedom, Unity, & Love.”

Thousands saw the ill-conceived ad, and some Blacks even called for a boycott. While the ad was surprising, I was more shocked to learn that some African Americans gave the ad the thumbs up.

The white couple never should have been the face of an African American event. Whites, and people of all races and backgrounds, can and should attend Juneteenth Day events. I want them to sample the delicious food created by people of African descent, take in our culture, socialize, but, more importantly, learn our history.

Many people do not understand what internalized racial oppression looks like. While cultivating diversity is good, Black leaders in Milwaukee said it should not be done at the expense of our own experiences. Juneteenth is a holiday and celebration whose images should only be that of descendants of enslaved people.

“People of color have spent so much energy trying to make people of white feel comfortable that we lose our own identity and value,” said Venice Williams, co-founder/producer at Kujichagulia Producers Cooperative in Milwaukee.

Apology by Greenville Juneteenth organizers felt whitewashed

Juneteenth GVL founder and executive director Reuben Hays, who is Black, apologized but only after some members of the board defended the banner saying it was one of 50 ads aimed at reflecting diversity. In the apology, Hays said:

"Juneteenth GVL would like to apologize to the community for the presence of non-black faces on two flags representing Juneteenth... We acknowledge this mistake having been made and will correct the error quickly. This error was an attempt at uniting all of Greenville and, thereby, a slight oversight on one individual’s part that prevented us from fully embracing the rich potential and celebrating the depth of the black culture through the message and meaning of Juneteenth and for that, we apologize to you the entire community."

Hays whitewashed African-American culture. It’s still mindboggling why he didn’t understand why placing white people on a banner representing Juneteenth was a problem from the beginning.

The decision is equivalent to hosting a “women’s march” but placing men on the fliers. While men should support women’s rights and causes, we should not be the face of any women’s event and vice versa.

'You should never be the image promoting what is ours'

While it’s always OK for other races and cultures to be lifted, nobody must explain anything to make people feel comfortable. Everyone should do their work to learn about cultures. Williams said African Americans have always had to explain why we are honoring our history and culture, while other races don’t have to.

Milwaukee has celebrated Juneteenth since 1971, and the event has grown over the past five decades. Today it features a vast street festival along Martin Luther King Jr. Drive. Food vendors offer everything from BBQ and Mac & Cheese to fried catfish and red velvet cake. You will also find strawberry soda, a staple because red in food represents the blood spilled by those lost during the multiple generations of slavery.

President Joe Biden signed a bill declaring Juneteenth a federal holiday on June 17, 2021. Slavery was abolished in state's that seceded from the union in January of 1863, but many enslaved people in the South – Texas particularly – didn’t know they were free until June 19, 1865, two and-a-half years after the Emancipation Proclamation. Slavery was abolished in the United States when the 13th Amendment to the Constitution was ratified in December 1865.

People still struggle with how to celebrate this day. If you are in this position, here are a few things you can do: Attend the Juneteenth Day celebrations; read books on African American history; learn more about slavery; spend your dollars with black-owned businesses; have a meal with a black person, and learn about the horrible truths of slavery.

Avoid cashing in or doing something cringe-worthy. For example, Walmart offered a “Celebrated Edition” Juneteenth Ice Cream last year and several other Juneteenth-themed items. The big box chain was criticized for trying to profit from the most important holiday of the year for Black Americans. The backlash from African Americans on social media was swift, forcing the retailer to pull the ice cream.

They were not alone. The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis also caught the fury of Black people when it sold “Juneteenth Watermelon Salad.” Like Walmart, the museum pulled the prepackaged salads and apologized.

White people play a role in Black history. Some played the role of antagonists, while others played positive roles by challenging the racist systems which discriminated against African Americans, like Father James Groppi, who helped fight against housing and racial discrimination in Milwaukee.

Williams offered these words of advice for white people interested in celebrating Juneteenth.

“You are more than welcome to celebrate with us and learn our history, but you should never be the image promoting what is ours,” she said.

Stop by the Journal Sentinel booth at Juneteenth

Milwaukee’s 52nd Juneteenth Day jubilee parade and street festival will be themed “I Am Juneteenth.” The event will be held from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday. The parade route will run from 14th and Atkinson Ave and ends at MLK Jr. Drive and Locust Streets. The Journal Sentinel and our partners at Listen MKE will have a booth at Juneteenth, and we want everyone to stop and say hello.

James E. Causeystarted reporting on life in his city while still at Marshall High School through a Milwaukee Sentinel high school internship. He's been covering his hometown ever since, writing and editing news stories, projects and opinion pieces on urban youth, mental health, employment, housing and incarceration. Most recently, he wrote about a man who went to prison as a child for a horrific crime inLife Correction: The Marlin Dixon story. Released at age 32, Dixon’s intent on giving his life meaning. Otherprojects include"What happened to us?"which tracked the lives of his third-grade classmates, and"Cultivating a community,"about the bonding that takes place around a neighborhood garden. Causey was a health fellow at the University of Southern California in 2018 and a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University in 2007.Email him atjcausey@jrn.com; follow him on Twitter@jecausey.

Editor’s note, Jan. 30: This story was republished to make it free for all readers.

Blacks shouldn't have to lose identity to promote Juneteenth events (2024)

FAQs

What is the Black perspective on Juneteenth? ›

Not even a generation out of slavery, African Americans were inspired and empowered to transform their lives and their country. Juneteenth marks our country's second independence day. Although it has long celebrated in the African American community, this monumental event remains largely unknown to most Americans.

Should non-black people celebrate Juneteenth? ›

DOES HOW YOU CELEBRATE JUNETEENTH MATTER IF YOU AREN'T BLACK? Dr. Karida Brown, a sociology professor at Emory University whose research focuses on race, said there's no reason to feel awkward about wanting to recognize Juneteenth because you have no personal ties or you're not Black. In fact, embrace it.

Why is it important for more people to know about Juneteenth? ›

It allows each generation to reflect what more there is to do. Juneteenth places Black people at the center of the conversation about freedom, it's meaning and manifestation in this nation. July 4th is about liberty, but it was an imperfect liberty, because slavery still legally existed in the nation.

What were some reasons for the decline in Juneteenth celebrations? ›

According to Barr, Juneteenth observations declined in the 1940s during World War II but were revived in 1950 “with 70,000 black people on the Texas State Fair grounds at Dallas.” The celebrations would decline again as attention went to school desegregation and the civil rights movement in the late 1950s and 1960s but ...

Is Juneteenth about slavery? ›

Juneteenth honors the date, June 19, 1865, when the last Confederate community of enslaved Americans in Galveston, Texas, received word that they had been freed from bondage.

What is the deeper meaning of Juneteenth? ›

Dating back to 1865, Juneteenth commemorates the day when 250,000 slaves in the state of Texas, which became the last bastion for slavery during the final days of the Civil War, were declared free by the U.S. Army.

Was Texas the last state to free slaves? ›

While Texas was the last Confederate state where enslaved people officially gained their freedom, there were holdouts elsewhere in the country.

What is the best way to explain Juneteenth? ›

For more than one-and-a-half centuries, the Juneteenth holiday has been sacred to many Black communities. It marks the day in 1865 enslaved people in Galveston, Texas found out they had been freed — after the end of the Civil war, and two years after President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation.

Why is it called Juneteenth and not Emancipation Day? ›

Juneteenth is a holiday commemorating the end of slavery in the United States. It is also called Emancipation Day or Juneteenth Independence Day. The name "Juneteenth" references the date of the holiday, combining the words "June" and "nineteenth."

What does the white star on the Juneteenth flag symbolize? ›

Symbolism. The five-pointed star refers both to Texas (nicknamed the "Lone Star state") and to the "freedom of African Americans in all 50 states". Surrounding it is a nova (or "new star") representing a new beginning for all.

What are the colors for Juneteenth for black people? ›

Many Black people celebrate Juneteenth with a flag that is red, black and green.

What is the message about Juneteenth? ›

Juneteenth, the day we celebrate the end of slavery, the day we memorialize those who offered us hope for the future and the day when we renew our commitment to the struggle for freedom.” 24. “We all require and want respect, man or woman, Black or white. It's our basic human right.”

What is the true story behind Juneteenth? ›

Dating back to 1865, Juneteenth commemorates the day when 250,000 slaves in the state of Texas, which became the last bastion for slavery during the final days of the Civil War, were declared free by the U.S. Army.

What was the difference between the 13th Amendment and Juneteenth? ›

Although the ratification of the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in December 1865 ultimately abolished slavery in all areas of the nation, Juneteenth captured the jubilation of the end of slavery in the Confederacy.

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