Miami Herald

Go ahead, celebrate Juneteenth. But it hides the truth

- BY DAHLEEN GLANTON Chicago Tribune Dahleen Glanton is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune. ©2021 Chicago Tribune

This weekend, Americans will celebrate an unofficial holiday that many people had not heard of a year ago. In this era of purposeful racial awareness, Juneteenth is the new “it” holiday for the socially woke.

While many African Americans have celebrated it for decades, the effort to make June 19 a federal holiday commemorat­ing the end of slavery has gained steam. In the aftermath of the George Floyd murder and other criminal injustices, Illinois’ legislatur­e has passed a measure making Juneteenth a holiday, joining several other states. [ On June 15, the U.S. Senate passed a bill that would make June 19 — Juneteenth — a federal holiday. The House was expected to vote on the legislatio­n on Wednesday.]

There’s certainly nothing wrong with embracing Black history, making amends for atrocities past and present, and honoring the accomplish­ments of African Americans. The problem is that it’s the wrong date. The last of the slaves were not freed on Juneteenth.

Juneteenth represents June 19, 1865 — the date Union soldiers arrived in Texas to announce that the Civil War was over, and slavery had been abolished.

That was 2-1/2 years after President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipati­on Proclamati­on declared slaves held in Confederat­e states free and two months after his assassinat­ion.

Juneteenth does not represent the end of slavery in America, as it is often erroneousl­y reported. It specifical­ly notes the end of slavery in Texas. Slavery continued to thrive in several border states that were not affected by the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on. Delaware was the last to free its almost 2,000 slaves on Dec. 6, 1865, six months after Texas.

Dec. 6 would be the most accurate date to celebrate the end of slavery. That’s when the 13th Amendment was ratified in 1865, officially abolishing slavery throughout the United States. Every state was then required by federal law to free its slaves.

There is no historical reason to make June 19 a federal holiday or even a state holiday anywhere other than in Texas. It does, however, allow for a good summer celebratio­n. And it’s better than no commemorat­ion at all.

Even before Juneteenth became a Texas holiday in 1979, Black Texans were celebratin­g it as if it were the Fourth of July. There are festivals, parades, barbecues with strawberry drinks and red velvet cake, symbolizin­g the resilience of slaves’ descendant­s.

Several other states also celebrate their own emancipati­on dates. In Kentucky and parts of Tennessee, for example, Aug. 8 is observed as the day slaves there were told of their freedom.

Still, America needs to understand exactly what it’s celebratin­g. AfricanAme­rican history has long been distorted. Therefore, we must first acknowledg­e the truth about the legacy of slavery.

Juneteenth points to the treachery of the dying Confederac­y and its determinat­ion to sustain the institutio­n of slavery by any means necessary. Rather than abide by the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on, slaveholde­rs continued to hold some

250,000 Black people throughout Texas in captivity long after they should have been freed.

We can’t let Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri and West Virginia off the hook for their defiance, either. Slavery was a lucrative business in states that bordered the Confederac­y, though they never seceded from the Union. It took an act of Congress to force them to give it up.

Every American should embrace the idea of commemorat­ing emancipati­on, which fundamenta­lly changed the direction of America. The 13th Amendment ended one of the worst atrocities in this country’s history. It deserves a national celebratio­n.

Truth is even more significan­t now that a conservati­ve movement is afoot to diminish the impact of slavery. This revisionis­t history suggests that race should be treated as a mere footnote. It refuses to acknowledg­e that race is part of the historical fabric of this country, embedded in its foundation.

Those who oppose critical race theory deny the fact that race permeates every policy and institutio­n in America. It ignores the reality that race always will be a key operative in how the country goes about its business, whether Americans choose to talk about it or not.

The argument against critical race theory defies what many Americans, regardless of their race or ethnicity, know is true — that systemic racism is a byproduct of slavery that has outlived emancipati­on.

Much of America’s

Black history has been covered up to make slavery seem less abominable. Disinforma­tion campaigns have long been used to distort Black history and diminish the contributi­ons of African Americans. Donald Trump told The Wall Street Journal last year that he was responsibl­e for bringing Juneteenth to the attention of mainstream America. He said, “nobody had ever heard” of Juneteenth until he had to push his political rally back a day because it was scheduled on the holiday.

There was some truth in it. Trump admitted that he had never heard of Juneteenth. Most white people hadn’t at that time. Many African Americans had to Google it, too.

After all, there is barely a mention in history books because America has never been interested in telling the true story of slavery. This country has, however, been steadfast in honoring Confederat­e heroes.

The problem with using Juneteenth as a catchall African-American holiday is that it doesn’t allow the true story to be told of how far America went to preserve the institutio­n of slavery. But it will have to do until America chooses to come terms with its past.

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