Why I revel in the joyful sound of Juneteenth
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鈥淧arty with a purpose鈥 is a phrase that fits well with most Black holidays and occasions. Historically, Juneteenth has been no different. Yet something curious has happened since the day became a federal holiday in the United States in 2021. This jubilant celebration of African American independence has somehow become less fun.
A controversy last June聽underscored this dynamic. A series of multiracial banners appeared throughout downtown Greenville, South Carolina, which raised angst among certain community members because of the Black origins of Juneteenth. What was lost in the conversation went beyond a sense of community 鈥 there was also a less celebratory mood.
That joy was restored for me, in part, by the Band of Brothers, an organization in Augusta, Georgia, that has hosted an annual Juneteenth event for several years. As I rode through downtown last June, past the James Brown statue, I was struck by the beautiful people filling the streets. It reminded me of perhaps Mr. Brown鈥檚 most affirming opus 鈥 鈥淪ay It Loud (I鈥檓 Black and I鈥檓 Proud).鈥
Why We Wrote This
A story focused onThe elevation of Juneteenth to federal holiday has brought fresh opportunities to educate Americans about Black history. Our columnist hopes that joy and community remain central to the holiday.
Travis 鈥淕odbrotha鈥 Wright, a Band of Brothers member, understands the delicate balance between an occasion that promotes history and a good time.
鈥淚t鈥檚 important for us to not just observe Juneteenth, but also to celebrate it in the same fashion as, say, the Fourth of July,鈥 Mr. Wright says in a phone interview. 鈥淪ome people feel it should be Afrocentric and educational, but the other part feels like you don鈥檛 do that at a Fourth of July event.鈥
The group doesn鈥檛 eschew the educational component of the holiday. There鈥檚 a perennial presentation from Wayne O鈥橞ryant, a prominent historian, as well as African drum performances. After that? 鈥淲e want to party and have a good time with our kinfolk,鈥 Mr. Wright says.
The Brothers organized in 2017 with the intent of celebrating the holiday. The group was formed among civic-minded and entrepreneurial members, and has since grown into an organization that serves the community year-round.
鈥淚t may be a parent who鈥檚 having an issue with their child, or a teacher who has an opportunity for speakers to come into their school,鈥 says Mr. Wright. 鈥淏ecause we have 20 members with varying work schedules, there鈥檚 always someone who can be pulled and show up for [the community].鈥
According to Mr. Wright, the annual event in Augusta is one of Georgia鈥檚 largest Juneteenth celebrations, second only to one in Columbus. The Brothers have been able to secure well-known acts in the past, including the hip-hop group Goodie Mob. Festivities are as integral to the holiday as any effort to teach the history of Black liberation from chattel slavery. Indeed, some of the first Juneteenth celebrations went by another name, Jubilee Day.
Honoring the celebratory nature of the holiday is something that should not be taken for granted. Rest and relaxation might not be revolutionary, but they are essential to peace and prosperity.
Because Juneteenth was largely resurrected on a nationwide basis during the Black Lives Matter movement, there will always be a select group of the populace that associates the holiday with that social justice uprising. That might be seen as a negative to some, but from my viewpoint, it acknowledges the hard-fought history of pro-Black legislation and the fight for liberation in this country.
Even with that conflict in mind, there is still room to dance, and to dream.聽
One figure who has embodied that spirit is Opal Lee, a Texas teacher, humanitarian, and activist who is known as the 鈥淕randmother of Juneteenth.鈥 In May, President Joe Biden awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Her now iconic 1,400-mile walk in 2016 from Fort Worth, Texas, to Washington, D.C., helped secure federal recognition of Juneteenth. That journey was both purposeful and joyful, a fun endeavor that inspired an annual community Walk for Freedom.聽
I hope these communal traditions endure, not just among grandmothers in Texas or brothers in Georgia, but for all who choose to celebrate Black freedom.