'Civil rights isn't over': Americans mark Juneteenth coast to coast
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[June 20, 2020]
By Rich McKay and Brad Brooks
ATLANTA (Reuters) - Thousands marched
through U.S. cities on Friday in Juneteenth observances marking the
abolition of slavery more than a century and a half ago, an occasion
freighted with special resonance this year amid America's reckoning with
its legacy of racism.
Capping nearly four weeks of protests and national soul-searching
aroused by the death of a Black man, George Floyd, under the knee of a
white police officer, demonstrators took to the streets from Atlanta to
Oakland, California, blending the Juneteenth holiday with calls for
racial justice.
With many formal Juneteenth events canceled due to coronavirus concerns,
activists instead organized a host of virtual observances online, as
well as street marches and "car caravans" through several major cities.
While the gatherings were largely festive in mood, in keeping with
Juneteenth traditions, they were also animated by demands for reforms to
end brutality and discrimination in U.S. law enforcement.
Organized labor joined in the movement, with union dockworkers at 29
West Coast cargo ports marking the occasion by staging a one-day strike.
Numerous major U.S. corporations declared June 19 a paid holiday this
year, some for the first time.
Juneteenth, a portmanteau of June and 19th, commemorates the U.S.
abolition of slavery under President Abraham Lincoln's 1863 Emancipation
Proclamation, belatedly announced by a Union army in Galveston, Texas,
on June 19, 1865, after the Civil War ended.
Texas officially made it a holiday in 1980, and 45 more states and the
District of Columbia have since followed suit.
Four Democratic U.S. senators planned to introduce a bill to declare
Juneteenth a federal holiday.
"Juneteenth is the oldest celebration of the end of slavery in the US.
And it should be recognized as a federal holiday," Senator Tina Smith,
one of four, wrote on Twitter.
One focal point of Friday's events was Atlanta, a center of the civil
rights movement of the 1960s, where about 1,000 people gathered at
Centennial Olympic Park downtown for a peaceful march on the state
capitol building.
Emotions were running high in Atlanta, where Rayshard Brooks, an African
American, was fatally shot in the back by a white policeman in the
parking lot of a fast-food restaurant June 12, reigniting outrage still
simmering from Floyd's death on May 25 in Minneapolis. The Atlanta
policeman was dismissed from the department and charged with murder,
although his arrest came more quickly than that of the officer
ultimately charged with murder in the Floyd case.
Many Atlanta marchers carried signs proclaiming "Black Lives Matter," or
"Get your knee off our necks," and "I can't breathe," referring to
Floyd's dying words.
'CIVIL RIGHTS ISN'T OVER'
Marcher Antonio Jeremiah Parks, 27, of Atlanta said the civil rights
movement had not yet fulfilled its promises.
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A woman raises her fist during events to mark Juneteenth, which
commemorates the end of slavery in Texas, two years after the 1863
Emancipation Proclamation freed slaves elsewhere in the United
States, amid nationwide protests against racial inequality, in the
Harlem neighbourhood of Manhattan, in New York City, New York, U.S.,
June 19, 2020. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly
"Civil rights isn't over," said Parks, who is Black and works at a
homeless shelter. "We still feel the pain of slavery. It's not
healed, and won't be until we're treated the same."
Leia Shanks, 34, who is white and works in retail, said, "We need to
stand against racism, and even though it's 2020, what's happening
now isn't right."
In New York City, a few hundred protesters, most of them wearing
masks against the spread of the coronavirus, gathered outside the
Brooklyn Museum.
"African-American history is American history. Black history is
American history. We need to be heard, we need people to see us. ...
we need to be understood, we need to be seen as equal," Maxwell
Awosanya said as he handed out free snacks and water to the swelling
crowd of protesters.
A diverse crowd, including parents with children in strollers and a
large contingent of people on bicycles, marched in downtown
Brooklyn, chanting "No justice, no peace" and "Say his name, George
Floyd."
In Texas, where Juneteenth originated, Lucy Bremond oversees what is
believed to be the oldest public celebration of the occasion each
year in Houston's Emancipation Park. This year a gathering that
typically draws some 6,000 people to the park was replaced with a
virtual observance.
"There are a lot of people who did not even know Juneteenth existed
until these past few weeks," Bremond said.
Some 1,500 protesters gathered at the Port of Oakland to join local
dockworkers in a work stoppage. The crowd was due to march to
downtown Oakland, with many of the dockworkers driving in a caravan
along the way.
But much of the annual observance was taking take place on social
media, with online lectures, discussion groups and virtual
breakfasts - organized as a safe alternative for a minority
community especially hard hit by the pandemic.
"We have been training our staff on how to use technology to present
their events virtually and online," said Steve Williams, president
of the National Juneteenth Observance Foundation.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; Brad Brooks in Austin, Texas;
Maria Caspani in New York; Additional reporting and writing and by
Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Writing by Alistair Bell; Editing by
Jonathan Oatis and Daniel Wallis)
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