San Diego Union-Tribune

LA MESA LOOKS TO HEAL WITH JUNETEENTH EVENT

City leaders want to bring residents together to find some common ground

- BY BLAKE NELSON

You’ve got options to mark Juneteenth in San Diego County.

There’s a bike ride and movie screenings on Saturday. A 5K launches Sunday while county offices close Monday.

But a first-of-its-kind celebratio­n this weekend in La Mesa promises to be especially significan­t, coming just two years after the East County city was rocked by violent protests following George Floyd’s murder.

“On the heels of the tumultuous conflict year La Mesa has had racially, we wanted to make it a point to make this a community event, as much as it is a Juneteenth celebratio­n,” Kim Vinyard, the event coordinato­r, said in an interview.

Two banks and a historic building burned in 2020. Police fired rubber bullets and tear gas, and one officer lost his job after a contentiou­s arrest.

Organizers and city leaders agreed that bringing together a broad swath of people to mark an oft-forgotten moment in history could help neighbors find common ground.

“I think every event should be inclusive and should heal, not only in La Mesa, but our entire nation,” Mayor Mark Arapostath­is said in an interview.

The Civil War had been over for months on June 19, 1865, when Union soldiers finally reached Galveston, Texas, to tell the last group of enslaved Black American they were free. While that moment has long been celebrated by some citizens, it only became a federal holiday last year.

La Mesa’s mayor said his history classes growing up left Juneteenth out, and Vinyard, who is Black and grew up in Santee, said she’d only heard of it a few years ago.

La Mesa needs this, especially after the protests, said Allan Durden, one of the main organizers and a member of the city’s Community Relations and Veterans Commission.

“We wanted to show the city, the county, the state that La Mesa is not that kind of city,” Durden said in an interview. “We wanted to show that La Mesa is a diverse city, and that we support all cultures.”

Starting noon Sunday in MacArthur Park, residents should get the full gamut of local food, live music and art. There will be a bounce house for kids and an SDSU professor speaking on emancipati­on. The San Diego Martin Luther King

Choir is scheduled to perform, as is the step team from Mount Miguel High School.

“This is gonna be huge for all of us,” Police Chief Ray Sweeney said in an interview.

Sweeney took over last year, after his predecesso­r stepped down the same summer as the protests.

The chief said attending

Sunday will not only allow him to connect with residents, but might help recruit new officers.

Planning for the event began about a year ago, after a pandemic delay.

Local officials are promoting it, although the event isn’t overseen by the city. Durden and other small donors are covering much of the cost, estimated to be around $6,000, and leaders are relying on about 30 volunteers, including students from nearby Helix and

Grossmont high schools.

Organizers from the “La Mesa Juneteenth and Friends” commitee hope Sunday will start a new tradition.

One question that remains: How many will show up?

“I’m a little afraid actually, as an event planner, that we have way more people than we expect,” Vinyard said.

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