High
props go to 94-year-old Opal Lee, the Texas woman determined to make
Juneteenth a national holiday. Thanks to her efforts and those of
others like Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas) and Senator
Cory Booker (D-NJ), Juneteenth is now a federal holiday, the eleventh
national holiday, and the first since Dr. Martin Luther King’s
birthday was made a holiday. For federal employees, it means a paid
day off work. Some private employers will also make Juneteenth a paid
day off. I chuckle at the irony of Klan members getting a paid day
off work to commemorate Juneteenth. Perhaps that will help them with
the concept that the South lost the Civil War!
While
I am buoyed by the new holiday, I’m not jumping for joy nor
dancing in the street. The Senate passed the holiday legislation
unanimously. How come they can’t do the same for the George
Floyd bill or voting rights? While the Juneteenth holiday is
impactful, the ease with which it got Senate passage ought to give us
all pause. It is easier to support a holiday than to support the
principle of democracy, which is allegedly at the foundation of our
democracy. It is easier to support a holiday than to abolish the use
of the chokehold. It is easier to support a holiday than to support
SB 40, the Senate’s reparations bill.
Juneteenth
reminds me of justice and equality denied. Those Galveston enslaved
people didn’t find out they were free until nearly two and a
half years after President Lincoln signed the Emancipation
Proclamation. Their exploiters were the beneficiaries of thousands of
hours of free labor. They intended to game the system and exploit
Black people for as long as they could. Fast forward. The exploiters
are still gaming the system with prison labor, substandard wages, and
other forms of economic injustice. It will take something more than a
holiday to right those wrongs.
If
Juneteenth goes the same way other American “holidays”
do, it will be commercialized. Consider Dr. King’s birthday and
the sales that holiday motivates. I cringe to think what might be
sold to commemorate Juneteenth, but capitalism is the mother of
exploitation, so I’m sure the evilly creative will come up with
something. No, I’m not jumping for Juneteenth.
President
Biden gets credit for signing this legislation, just as he gets
credit for going to Tulsa at the hundredth commemoration of the
destruction of Black Wall Street. While both these things are
primarily symbolic, these are symbolic gestures that he did not have
to make. If Biden doesn’t “get” race and racism
(and honestly, what white person does), he’s spent enough time
with Senior Advisor Cedric Richmond and Vice President Kamala Harris
to communicate his affinity for Black people and his commitment to
some progress. It’s up to us, now, to push him on what needs to
happen next.
We
aren’t likely to get the John Lewis Voting Rights Act passed
unless the filibuster is eliminated. Still, President Biden has
shillyshallied about getting rid of the filibuster, and West
Virginia’s DINO (Democrat in Name Only) Senator Joe Manchin is
no help. He says he values bipartisanship, but he seems to appreciate
nothing more than the attention he gets by “negotiating”
with recalcitrant Republicans who love the former president more than
they value justice. Sure, they voted unanimously to make Juneteenth a
federal holiday. Still, several in Congress voted against it, and
several others voted to withhold the Congressional Medal of Honor
from the capitol police officers who bravely defended them on January
6. Some of them still adhere to the big lie that the previous won the
election. But they voted to make Juneteenth a holiday. I’m not
jumping.
Juneteenth
represents more than symbolic progress, though. While most of white
America had never heard of Juneteenth, now they have. They now have
the opportunity to reflect on our nation’s history in ways they
haven’t reflected on it before. Annually, there will be a
flurry of newspaper articles and television specials focusing on
Juneteenth. The ignorant can change the channel or flip the pages of
their newspapers, but commemorating Juneteenth begins the process of
fully embracing our flawed history.
So
while I won’t jump, I’ll pause for a minute to thank the
Juneteenth warriors who made this holiday happen. And I’ll ask
President Biden not to rest on his laurels. We need the John Lewis
Voting Rights Act to be passed yesterday, and by whatever means
necessary. Melvin van Peebles wrote a play in the 1970s, Ain’t
Supposed to Die a Natural Death.
One of the lines that stuck with me through these many years is from
a woman folks assume is suicidal because she is standing on a ledge.
She says, “I ain’t leaping. I’m just learning.”
That’s how I feel about the Juneteenth holiday, not leaping for
joy but leaning in gratitude and progress.
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BC Editorial Board Member Dr.
Julianne Malveaux, PhD (JulianneMalveaux.com)
is dean
of the College of Ethnic Studies at Cal State,
the
Honorary Co-Chair of the Social Action Commission of Delta Sigma
Theta Sorority, Incorporated and serves on the boards of the Economic
Policy Institute as well as The Recreation Wish List Committee of
Washington, DC. Her latest book is Are
We Better Off? Race, Obama and Public Policy. A native San
Franciscan, she is the President and owner of Economic Education a
501 c-3 non-profit headquartered in Washington, D.C. During her time
as the 15th President of Bennett College for Women, Dr. Malveaux was
the architect of exciting and innovative transformation at America’s
oldest historically black college for women. Contact
Dr. Malveaux and BC.
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