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			 The morning stared with a march from the AME 
			church to the fairgrounds, followed by some brief words from Jessica 
			Jackson on the importance of the holiday. Quentin Brackenridge led 
			the crowd in a performance of the holiday’s anthem, “Lift Every 
			Voice and Sing.”  
			 
			For the rest of the day, there were various speakers and 
			performances. A number of small, African-American owned businesses 
			from around central Illinois set up tables. Several people brought 
			grills and shared food. 
			
			  
			But beyond all of that, it was a day for celebration. Juneteenth - 
			also known as Freedom Day, Jubilee Day, Liberation Day, or 
			Emancipation Day - is a holiday celebrating the emancipation of 
			those who had been enslaved in the United States.  
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			The holiday came about with the liberation of the last slaves in the United 
States in Texas, and commemorates the day that Union army general Gordon Granger 
gave federal orders in Galveston, Texas, proclaiming that all slaves in Texas 
were free. This was nearly two-and-half years after the Emancipation 
Proclamation.  
 
What makes this year’s celebration all the more important is that both the state 
of Illinois and the federal government recently recognized Juneteenth as 
official government holidays. 
 
[Derek Hurley]  |