Juneteenth and the Unfinished Fight for American Freedom [View all]
National Civil Rights Museum Op-Ed
Dr. Russ Wigginton, President
JuneteenthJune 19, 1865is more than a date on the calendar. It marks the moment when the last enslaved Black Americans in Galveston, Texas were told they were free, more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation had legally set them free. That delay wasnt just a logistical oversightit was symbolic of a larger truth: that freedom in America has always been unevenly distributed, often delayed, and frequently denied.
Yet Juneteenth also represents the idea that emancipation was not an end, but a beginninga launchpad for a broader and more inclusive vision of American freedom. When Black Americans were emancipated, it was a radical shift not just for them, but for the entire American society. It forced this country to confront the gap between its founding ideals and its lived reality. Freedom, if it was to mean anything, had to apply to everyone.
Fast forward to today: we are living in a time when basic civil and human rights are once again under threat. We see rollbacks on voting rights, attacks on bodily autonomy, a dismantling of affirmative action, restrictions on LGBTQIA+ expression, and a rise in censorship. Book bans. Curriculum whitewashing. Suppression of protest. These arent isolated incidentsthey are symptoms of a coordinated backlash against what it means to be inclusive.
Juneteenth should remind us that freedom has never been free. It has always been fought forinch by inch, generation by generation. The chaos in our current political climate isnt just noise; its the sound of a system afraid of losing control. But thats not a reason to retreat. Its a call to step forward, to highlight community over chaos.
True American freedom isnt a finished product. Its a living promiseone we must constantly work to fulfill.
https://civilrightsmuseum.org/blog/juneteenth-and-the-unfinished-fight-for-american-freedom/