Last updated on June 16, 2022
DeJuana L. Thompson is a political and social strategist providing innovative and sustainable engagement methods and models for candidates, campaigns, and community organizations. She is a founding partner with Think Rubix, a social innovation consultancy which helps nonprofits, businesses, and governments to engage in systems change to harness the transformative power of culture. DeJuana was recently named the Interim President and CEO of the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute. The Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, part of the Birmingham Civil Rights National Monument and an affiliate of the Smithsonian Institution, is a cultural and educational research center that promotes a comprehensive understanding of the significance of civil rights developments in Birmingham. She is also the founder of Woke Vote, an organization designed to engage, mobilize, and turnout African American voters in the South through campus and faith-based outreach, strategic media outreach, culturally relevant GOTV efforts and training for organizers.
It’s impossible to imagine their state of mind when they heard that the rumors were true.
In 1863, during the American Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, which declared more than three million slaves living in the Confederate states to be free. More than two years would pass, however, before the news reached African Americans living in Texas. It wasn’t until Union soldiers arrived in Galveston, Texas, on June 19, 1865, that the state’s residents finally learned that slavery had been abolished. They were free. But what does freedom mean when you, your community, and your home aren’t yet safe and secure?
Regardless of what might come next, formerly enslaved people in Galveston celebrated after the announcement. The following year, freedmen in Texas organized the first of what became the annual celebration of “Jubilee Day” on June 19. Early celebrations were used as political rallies to give voting instructions to newly freed slaves. The holiday we now know as Juneteenth arose out of these festivities, and spread beyond Texas as a day for everyone in this country to remember and reckon with our painful history.
Juneteenth became a federal holiday in June 2021, and countless communities across the country recognize it through various events, including parades, concerts, speaker series, etc. However, the underlying significance can’t be lost. In the country’s ongoing effort to increase awareness around Black lives and what protects them, it’s crucial that we also bring to light the relevance of this holiday to current events.
Home, to me, is a verb. It’s the act of participating in the living conditions and surroundings in my daily life, and the act of collectively accumulating some of my most treasured possessions. Community, then, is a natural outgrowth of what I value in my house. Those surroundings, those collective precious memories and traditions coming together to recognize that we are stronger together, better together, and create our home together.
Some authentic steps have to be taken to ensure that everyone gets to be home — to be part of a community devoted to thriving and living safely. As neighbors, we can and must all participate in this action in our homes, workplaces, and communities. Here are some of the ways you can celebrate and honor Juneteenth this year:
This Juneteenth, we have a rare opportunity. We can think about not only what home meant in the past, but what home can mean in the future. Do we build harmony, and community by learning about what binds us together? Or, do we repeat actions of fear and insecurity, built to drive us apart. To start, we can reflect on the generations celebrating for their newfound freedom. We can honor their struggles, and continue to build a tomorrow better than our yesterdays.
That much, more and anything, is possible.
At Nextdoor, diversity, inclusivity and belonging are core to our purpose of creating a kinder world where everyone has a neighborhood they can rely on. For Juneteenth, we implemented a logo variation to honor and bring awareness to the abolishment of slavery in the U.S.
How are you commemorating Juneteenth in your neighborhood? Share some inspiration with neighbors on Nextdoor.
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