New York Daily News

LAND OF THE FREE

Juneteenth pride sweeps city, nation

- BY MORGAN CHITTUM, ANNA CHOI, CATARINA MOURA AND LEONARD GREENE

New York’s newest holiday was a showcase of speakers and marchers who rallied Friday to commemorat­e the Juneteenth slavery abolition celebratio­n, and set the tone for the city and national push for racial justice.

Activists crowded Brooklyn’s Grand Army Plaza chanting slogans and holding signs filled with hope and promise for brighter days after a dark month of police brutality and social upheaval.

Days after Gov. Cuomo declared June 19 a New York holiday this year in recognitio­n of the Juneteenth commemorat­ion, organizers hit the streets vowing to move forward and cash in on the momentum generated by protests from coast to coast.

“We cannot let up,” said Sharon Lee, the acting Queens borough president.

“It’s been working. It is working,” Lee said of the protests that broke out across the country over police killings of black people.

Lee said the drive for justice has to continue. “As the Queens borough president and as an American of Asian descent, Juneteenth is an Independen­ce Day,” she said. “I know that all lives won’t matter until black lives matter. Because what this is about is about systemic racism.”

Demonstrat­ors urged officials including Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, city Comptrolle­r Scott Stringer and Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams to demand police reform weeks after the death of George Floyd, who died after a Minneapoli­s cop pressed his knee into the handcuffed man’s neck for nearly nine minutes during a Memorial Day arrest that was caught on camera.

They also called for justice in the case of Rayshard Brooks, who was fatally shot in the back by an Atlanta cop as he ran away in a fast food parking lot where he had been sleeping in his car.

Brooks had wrestled a Taser away from one of the officers and appeared to turn and point it when he was shot.

The impact of their deaths was not lost even on the youngest of march participan­ts.

“I’m angry because I’m being told all lives matter,” a 10-year-old boy named Prince told the Brooklyn crowd. “But how, when all I see is my people being killed in the streets. I want to stand tall like the king I was intended to be.”

The Brooklyn rally was one of many events organized to celebrate Juneteenth, which marks the day, June 19, 1865, when federal troops arrived in Galveston, Texas, to take control of the state and ensure that all enslaved people were freed.

An official record of the handwritte­n original Juneteenth emancipati­on announceme­nt is preserved at the National Archives Building in Washington, D. C.

“The people of the state of Texas are informed that in accordance with a proclamati­on from the Executive of the United States, ‘all slaves are free,’ ” says the notice signed by Maj. F.W. Emery on behalf of Union Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger on June 19, 1865 — two months after President Abraham Lincoln was assassinat­ed.

“This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and hired labor,” the notice says.

The holiday is getting renewed attention as the nation reels from angry protests and senseless killings that have shined the spotlight on social justice.

Cuomo made Juneteenth a holiday this year for state employees and said he will push the Legislatur­e to pass a measure recognizin­g the annual celebratio­n going forward.

Mayor de Blasio followed suit, saying that city recognitio­n of the holiday will go into effect next year.

“One thing that is profoundly clear in the history of African people in this county is that through the pain and struggle came an extraordin­ary purposeful­ness and vision,” the mayor said.

But some city leaders were not impressed with the mayor’s action, saying he moved too slowly.

Public Advocate Jumaane Williams said his office was closed on Friday in observance of Juneteenth.

“I’m sad that the mayor didn’t see fit to follow suit to make Juneteenth a holiday this year,” Williams said. “Why are you waiting until next year? He always seems to be a dollar short and a day late.”

Modern-day Juneteenth celebratio­ns have generally centered around picnics and parades, and forums on selfimprov­ement and education.

But the celebratio­n has been reborn this year as a day of protest.

In Tulsa, Okla., where white mobs massacred a black community in 1921, protesters spent Junteenth preparing to sound off against supporters of President Trump, who was scheduled to speak there Saturday at a campaign rally. The Rev. Al Sharpton was scheduled to speak at a Juneteenth event in Tulsa on Friday.

In Atlanta, thousands of people filled Centennial Olympic Park for a gospel festival, carrying Black Lives Matter signs or wearing Tshirts that said “I Can’t Breathe,” Floyd’s last words.

In Manhattan, nurses and first responders took a knee in solidarity outside Lenox Hill Hospital.

“I’m a registered profession­al nurse, on the front lines fighting multiple pandemics,” said Sheree-Ann Shepherd, an executive board member of the New York Profession­al Nurses Union.

“Systemic racism still very much exists in all aspects of our lives. People of color, especially black American patients, are dying of COVID at twice the rate, and in some states, three times the rate, of white patients,” Shepherd said. “Together, we in this hospital have fought a pandemic, and together we will fight the pandemic out here.”

In lower Manhattan, protesters kneeled in Foley Square to mark the length of time that fired cop Derek Chauvin had his knee on Floyd’s neck. Then they marched under a bright sun through Tribeca toward Washington Square Park, where volunteers handed out water bottles sunscreen and snacks.

Bria Grant, 27, of Brooklyn, said she was glad for a relevant holiday to celebrate.

“For me, being an African American woman, it almost seems like the Fourth of July isn’t for me,” said Grant, as she clutched a red, black and green pan-African flag and explained the meaning of the colors: red for the blood of her ancestors, black for her blackness and green for the richness of the African continent.

“But for Juneteenth — the meaning behind it, the fact that the day they were freed, people celebrated and had a party — is kind of impactful for me. It’s a beautiful day to celebrate my ancestors and my blackness.”

 ??  ?? Young boy is toted on shoulders during parade near Central Park on Friday as thousands celebrate Juneteenth, which commemorat­es when the last enslaved African Americans learned they were free 155 years ago.
Young boy is toted on shoulders during parade near Central Park on Friday as thousands celebrate Juneteenth, which commemorat­es when the last enslaved African Americans learned they were free 155 years ago.
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 ??  ?? The Brooklyn Bridge is packed Friday with people celebratin­g Juneteenth, which marks 1865 proclamati­on that slaves were free. Similar outpouring­s of joy and a new sense of justice were seen in Dallas (below) and Washington D.C. (right).
The Brooklyn Bridge is packed Friday with people celebratin­g Juneteenth, which marks 1865 proclamati­on that slaves were free. Similar outpouring­s of joy and a new sense of justice were seen in Dallas (below) and Washington D.C. (right).
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