Juneteenth, equal rights and the heritage of ALL – Latest News
America at this time celebrates Juneteenth, commemorating each the horrors of the nation’s authentic sin, slavery, and its finish.
The vacation traces to victorious Union Gen. Gordon Granger’s June 19, 1865, order placing the Emancipation Proclamation into full legal impact throughout Texas and releasing all the state’s remaining slaves. It has since unfold, culminating in federal recognition in 2021.
But what, as a vacation for all Americans, ought to we make of it?
Bubbles float round a bag Celebrate 1865 Juneteenth during Spartanburg celebrates Juneteenth Music in the Park in Spartanburg, SC Thursday, June 18, 2026. USA TODAY Network through Reuters Co
Let us not deal with black historical past and black life as one way or the other unapproachably other than the bigger historical past and life of this nation.
As the great sociologist and civil-rights warrior W.E.B. Du Bois stated in 1905:
We won’t be glad to take one jot or tittle much less than our full manhood rights. We declare for ourselves each single proper that belongs to a freeborn American, political, civil and social; and till we get these rights we’ll by no means stop to protest and assail the ears of America. The battle we wage isn’t for ourselves alone however for all true Americans.
Precisely. The black quest for freedom and dignity is inextricably linked to the bigger concepts that breathed life into this nation, reminding us all that liberty and dignity are to not be taken as a right, however to be frequently fought for and defended.
With long and bloody wrestle, the nation ended slavery; with a for much longer wrestle, black Americans gained long-denied legal rights.
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Though black Americans nonetheless face obstacles, the new separatism — by which our completely different races, not our commonalities, will outline us for good and all — won’t advance the battle Du Bois waged.
As we struggle that battle onward, we stand on the shoulders of Du Bois and additionally Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, Frances Harper, Booker T. Washington and numerous others.
Yes, we: It’s our battle, no matter what the prophets of division argue.
And we ought to be as proud to take it up as we’re awed by the weight of struggling it carries.
