The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Amid protests for racial justice, Juneteenth gets new renown

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DETROIT — Protesters marched over the Brooklyn Bridge, chanted “We want justice now!” near St. Louis’ Gateway Arch, prayed in Atlanta and paused for a moment of silence at the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial in Washington, as Americans marked Juneteenth Friday with new urgency amid protests to demand racial justice.

The holiday, which commemorat­es the emancipati­on of enslaved African Americans, is usually celebrated with parades and festivals but became a day of protest this year in the wake of nationwide demonstrat­ions set off by George Floyd’s killing at the hands of police in Minneapoli­s.

In addition to the traditiona­l cookouts and readings of the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on — the Civil War-era order that declared all slaves free in Confederat­e territory — Americans were marching, holding sit-ins or car caravan protests.

Thousands of people gathered at a religious rally in Atlanta. Hundreds of people of all background­s marched from St. Louis’ Old Courthouse, where the Dred Scott case played out, a pivotal one that led to freeing those enslaved. Protesters and revelers held signs and pushed baby strollers in Dallas, danced to a marching band in Chicago, and, in Detroit, registered people to vote and encouraged them to participat­e in the Census.

“Now we have the attention of the world, and we are not going to let this slide,” said Charity Dean, director of Detroit’s office of Civil Rights,

Inclusion and Opportunit­y, who spoke during an event that called for an end to police brutality and racial equality, and which drew hundreds of people.

Events marking Juneteenth were planned in every major American city on Friday, although some were being held virtually due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. At some events, like in Chicago and New York, participan­ts packed together, though many wore masks; at others, masks were scarce, though.

In Nashville, Tennessee, about two dozen Black men, most wearing suits, quietly stood arm in arm Friday morning in front of the city’s criminal courts. Behind them was a statue of Justice Adolpho Birch, the first African American to serve as chief justice of the Tennessee Supreme

Court.

“If you were uncomforta­ble standing out here in a suit, imagine how you would feel with a knee to your neck,” said Phillip McGee, one of the demonstrat­ors, referring to Floyd, a Black man who died after a white police officer pressed a knee into his neck for several minutes.

President Abraham Lincoln first issued the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on on Sept. 22, 1862, and it became effective the following Jan. 1. But it wasn’t enforced in many places until after the Civil War ended in April 1865. Word didn’t reach the last enslaved Black people until June 19 of that year, when Union soldiers brought the news of freedom to Galveston, Texas.

Most states and the District of Columbia now recognize Juneteenth, which is a blend of the words June and 19th, as a state holiday or day of recognitio­n, like Flag Day. But in the wake of protests of Floyd’s killing this year and against a backdrop of the coronaviru­s pandemic that has disproport­ionately harmed Black communitie­s, more Americans — especially white Americans — are becoming familiar with the holiday and commemorat­ing it.

“Black people came here against their will and made America what it is today,” said New Yorker Jacqueline Forbes, a Jamaican immigrant, who marched on the Brooklyn Bridge. “This is something we need to celebrate.”

Some places that didn’t already mark Juneteenth as a paid holiday moved in recent days to do so, including New York state and Huntington, West Virginia.

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 ?? LM Otero / Associated Press ?? People hold yellow umbrellas during a Juneteenth 2020 celebratio­n and protest against police brutality in Dallas on Friday. The umbrellas bear the names of people who have been killed.
LM Otero / Associated Press People hold yellow umbrellas during a Juneteenth 2020 celebratio­n and protest against police brutality in Dallas on Friday. The umbrellas bear the names of people who have been killed.

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