US Introduces New Holiday Marking the End of Slavery: June 19 Chosen for Significant Reasons

Published in Aftenposten
(Norway) on 15 June 2021
by Kjetil Hanssen (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Danielle Skjelver. Edited by Gillian Palmer.
The U.S. Senate has unanimously adopted a new national holiday. The background is something that happened in Texas in 1865.

On Tuesday, the Senate passed a bill regarding a new federal holiday called Juneteenth, June 19. The date marks the end of slavery in the United States. The next step is now a vote in the House of Representatives and a signature from President Joe Biden.*

With that, it will become another American holiday.

Parades and Barbecues Since 1866

President Abraham Lincoln’s declaration of the abolition of slavery actually came on Jan. 1, 1863. But the Civil War was still ongoing, and many slaveholders carried on as before.

On June 19, 1865, Major General Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston, Texas. There he announced the end of both the Civil War and slavery. With that proclamation, the last slaves knew that they were free — more than two years after Lincoln’s declaration.

The very next year, the day became a holiday in Texas, according to a memo from the National Archives. Parades, barbecues, prayer meetings, public readings and concerts were arranged. Gradually, as Black families moved from Texas to other parts of the country, they brought with them the tradition of celebrating Juneteenth.

Now the day is a day of celebration in 48 states and Washington, D.C. In four states — Texas, New York, Virginia and Washington — employees have the day off.

In connection with the demonstrations last year, the demand was made again that Juneteenth become a national holiday.

No Objection

On Tuesday of this week, the demand was met. No one in the Senate voted against it. The last time the holiday was proposed, Republican Sen. Ron Johnson voted against it. This time, however, the case was approved through a process that quickly passes new laws, so long as the bill has unanimous support.

Johnson is still uneasy because the holiday for government employees will cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars. Even so, he has now resigned himself to the matter. “[I]t still seems strange that having taxpayers provide federal employees paid time off is now required to celebrate the end of slavery,” he said.

He added that there was no interest in further discussing the case in Congress. Therefore, he did not object.

Democrat Edward Markey, who had introduced the bill, believes it was high time. He believes that the U.S. has a long way to go in the fight against racial discrimination. “[W]e cannot get there without acknowledging our nation’s original sin of slavery,” he asserted on Twitter.

Trump Made the Day Famous

Last year, there was a little political uproar about the day because President Donald Trump made plans to resume holding political rallies on June 19. The rally was nevertheless moved to the next day.

Subsequently, the president credited the uproar as the reason why Juneteenth had become a known and popular day. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Trump said that it was one of his Black bodyguards who told him that June 19 was a day of celebration. “I did something good: I made Juneteenth very famous,” Trump said to the newspaper, claiming that very few people — or actually, “nobody had ever heard” of the day.

*Editor's Note: Biden signed the Juneteenth holiday into effect on June 17.


Tagline: USAs senat har enstemmig vedtatt en ny nasjonal høytidsdag. Bakgrunnen er noe som skjedde i Texas i 1865.

Senatet vedtok tirsdag loven om dagen som kalles juneteenth. Det er den 19. juni. Datoen markerer slutten på slaveriet i USA. Neste steg er nå et vedtak i Representantenes hus og en underskrift fra president Joe Biden.
Dermed blir dette enda en av USAs høytidsdager.

Opptog og grillfester siden 1866
President Abraham Lincolns erklæring om slaveriets opphevelse kom egentlig 1. januar 1863. Men borgerkrigen pågikk fortsatt, og mange slaveeiere fortsatte sin virksomhet.

19. juni 1865 kom generalmajor Gordon Granger til Galveston i Texas. Der kunngjorde han slutten både på borgerkrigen og slaveriet. Dermed fikk de siste slavene vite at de var frie. Det var med andre ord over to år etter Lincolns erklæring.

Allerede året etter ble dagen feiret i Texas, ifølge et notat fra Kongressens utredningskontor. Det ble arrangert opptog, grillfester, bønnemøter, høytlesning og konserter. Etter hvert som svarte familier flyttet fra Texas til andre deler av landet, brakte de med seg tradisjonen for feiring av juneteenth.

Nå er dagen en merkedag i 48 delstater og USAs hovedstad Washington. I fire stater får ansatte i delstaten fri: Texas, New York, Virginia og Washington.
I forbindelse med demonstrasjoner i fjor ble det igjen fremsatt krav om at den skal bli en nasjonal høytidsdag.

Protesterte ikke
Og tirsdag denne uken ble kravet innfridd. Ingen i Senatet stemte imot. Forrige gang saken var oppe, gjorde den republikanske senatoren Ron Johnson det. Denne gang gikk saken derimot gjennom i en prosedyre som får en ny lov hurtig vedtatt. Forutsetningen er altså at vedtaket er enstemmig.

Johnson er fortsatt urolig for at fridagen for offentlig ansatte vil koste skattebetalerne 5 milliarder kroner. Nå hadde han likevel resignert.
– Det virker fortsatt merkelig at det er nødvendig med en betalt fridag for statsansatte på skattebetalernes regning for å feire slaveriets slutt, sa Johnson.
Han la til at det ikke var noen stemning for å drøfte saken mer i Kongressen. Derfor protesterte han ikke.
– På høy tid

Demokraten Ed Markey, som hadde lagt frem forslaget, mener det var på høy tid. Han mener USA har en lang vei å gå i kampen mot rasediskriminering.
– Vi kan ikke komme dit uten å erkjenne nasjonens arvesynd med slaveriet, fremholder han på Twitter.

Trump: Gjorde dagen berømt
I fjor ble det litt politisk rabalder om dagen. Årsaken var at president Donald Trump planla å starte opp igjen med folkemøter 19. juni. Møtet ble imidlertid flyttet til dagen etter.

Deretter ga presidenten spetakkelet æren for at juneteenth var blitt en kjent og populær dag. I et intervju med The Wall Street Journal sier Trump at det var en hans svarte livvakter som informerte ham om at 19. juni var en merkedag.
– Jeg gjorde noe bra. Jeg gjorde juneteenth veldig berømt, sa Trump til avisen og hevdet at få – eller egentlig ingen – før hadde hørt om dagen.

This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link .

Hot this week

Taiwan: Making America Great Again and Taiwan’s Crucial Choice

Afghanistan: The Trump Problem

Russia: Political Analyst Reveals the Real Reason behind US Tariffs*

Topics

Afghanistan: The Trump Problem

Taiwan: Making America Great Again and Taiwan’s Crucial Choice

Russia: Political Analyst Reveals the Real Reason behind US Tariffs*

Poland: Meloni in the White House. Has Trump Forgotten Poland?*

Germany: US Companies in Tariff Crisis: Planning Impossible, Price Increases Necessary

Japan: US Administration Losing Credibility 3 Months into Policy of Threats

Mauritius: Could Trump Be Leading the World into Recession?

Related Articles

U.K.: The Guardian View on Donald Trump’s Industrial Policy: Inward Turn by Ultimatum

Israel: Trump’s Friendship with Israel Is a Double-Edged Sword

South Africa: The Oligarch Era: Is Democracy Finally Fighting Back in the Land of the Free?

Turkey: Daddy Donald and the Coalition of Napoleons

Israel: With Strong US-Israel Alliance, Criticism of Each Other Should Be Expressed in Private