The Guardian (USA)

Americans mark Juneteenth with celebratio­ns, parades and reflection

- Guardian staff and agency

Americans across the country celebrated Juneteenth, marking the relatively new national holiday on 19 June with cookouts, parades and other gatherings as they commemorat­ed the end of slavery after the civil war.

While many have treated the long holiday weekend as a reason for a party, others urged quiet reflection on America’s often violent and oppressive treatment of its Black citizens.

And still others have remarked at the strangenes­s of celebratin­g a federal holiday marking the end of slavery in the nation while many conservati­ve leaders are trying to stop parts of that history from being taught in public schools.

Monday’s federal holiday commemorat­ed the day in 1865 when enslaved people in Galveston, Texas, learned they had been freed – two years after the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on was issued during the bloody civil war.

On Juneteenth weekend, a Roman Catholic church in Detroit devoted its service to urging parishione­rs to take a deeper look at the lessons from the holiday.

“In order to have justice we must work for peace. And in order to have peace we must work for justice,” John Thorne, executive director of the Detroit Catholic Pastoral Alliance, said to the congregati­on at Gesu Catholic Church in Detroit.

Standing before paintings of a Black Jesus and Mary, Thorne said Juneteenth is a day of celebratio­n, but it also “has to be much more”.

It was important to speak about

Juneteenth during Sunday mass, the Rev Lorn Snow told a reporter as the service was ending.

“The struggle’s still not over with. There’s a lot of work to be done,” he said.

Most Black Americans agree, according to a recent poll. A full 70% of Black adults queried in a AP-NORC poll said “a lot” needs to be done to achieve equal treatment for African Americans in policing. And Black Americans suffer from significan­tly worse health outcomes than their white peers across a variety of measures, including rates of maternal mortality, asthma, high blood pressure and Alzheimer’s disease.

Other events to mark the holiday included a CNN special where Vice-Pres

ident Kamala Harris was scheduled to appear, along with with musical guests including Miguel and Charlie Wilson.

Although end-of-slavery celebratio­ns are new in many parts of the country, in Memphis, where the slave trade once thrived, the Juneteenth holiday has been celebrated since long before it became a designated federal holiday in 2021.

Events there include a multi-day festival including food, music, arts and crafts, and cultural exhibition­s in a treelined park in the city’s medical district.

Memphis is home to the National Civil Rights Museum located at the site of the old Lorraine Motel, the former Black-owned hotel where the civil rights leader the Rev Martin Luther King Jr was killed in 1968.

Ryan Jones, the museum’s associate curator, said Juneteenth should be celebrated in the US with the same emphasis that the Fourth of July receives as Independen­ce Day.

“It is the independen­ce of a people that were forced to endure oppression and discrimina­tion based on the color of their skin,” Jones said.

The Juneteenth holiday, Jones said, should also be viewed as more than a day when people attend parties and cookouts. In fact, he said, it is a time to reflect on the past.

“It acknowledg­es the sacrifices of those early civil rights veterans between World War I and World War II, and of course in the modern society, the protests, the demonstrat­ions, the non-violence, the marches,” Jones said.

In New York, a hybrid event in Central Park on Monday celebrated the 50th anniversar­y of hip-hop, with an emphasis on the local Black’s community’s impact on the genre.

As Americans gathered to mark the holiday, at least one event was marked by violence. In the Chicago suburb of Willowbroo­k, Illinois, on Saturday night, one person was killed and 22 were injured in a shooting where hundreds had gathered for a Juneteenth celebratio­n.

 ?? Photograph: Andrew Harnik/ ?? Chelsea Andrews, of Washington, waves the Juneteenth flag during a Juneteenth celebratio­n at Black Lives Matter Plaza in Washington on Monday.
Photograph: Andrew Harnik/ Chelsea Andrews, of Washington, waves the Juneteenth flag during a Juneteenth celebratio­n at Black Lives Matter Plaza in Washington on Monday.

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