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Article published Jun 11, 2008

By Peter Hirschfeld Vermont Press Bureau

MONTPELIER — It's safe to say most Vermonters have never heard of Juneteenth. And it's precisely that ignorance, according to Shirley Boyd-Hill, that made a bill-signing ceremony on Tuesday so important.

With a stroke of the governor's pen, Vermont became the 29th state in the nation to recognize Juneteenth as a state holiday. The holiday, to be celebrated annually on the third Saturday of June, commemorates the emancipation of African Americans from slavery on June 19, 1865.

"Hopefully people all over the state will celebrate this holiday now and recognize its significance," Boyd-Hill said during a bill-signing in the governor's fifth-floor conference room in the Pavilion Building Tuesday. The Fairfax woman chairs the state's Juneteenth Committee, which has lobbied for years for the state holiday.

The Emancipation Proclamation was signed in 1863, but slavery persisted in Confederate-controlled Texas, whose government refused to enforce Lincoln's seminal edict. On June 19, 1863, Union Gen. Gordon Granger arrived in Texas to take possession of the state and free its slaves. The holiday is celebrated widely in the South.

"Vermont prides itself on being one of the first states to abolish slavery, so I think it's quite fitting that we make it a state holiday," Boyd-Hill said. "And because Vermont is increasingly attracting more African Americans, I think it's quite fitting that we have our own holiday."

Vermont retains its status as one of the whitest states in the country, but demographic trends evince a recent influx of minorities to Vermont. According to the 2000 Census, only about 0.5 percent of Vermonters identify as African American. Still, that's a 57 percent increase over 1990. And in Burlington, which boasts the fastest-growing minority population in Vermont, up to one-third of students in some public schools are children of color.

"Three out of every 10 new Vermonters are either racial or ethnic minorities," said Curtiss Reed, Jr., executive director of ALANA Community Organization, which seeks to build "inclusive and equitable" communities. "There is an emerging minority community. The mindset of Vermont being uniformly white is no longer the case."

Gov. James Douglas used the bill-singing ceremony to herald Vermont's reputation as an inclusive state that celebrates minorities and their contributions to its communities.

"I think Vermont is a place where everyone, regardless of race or background, can succeed," Douglas said. The Juneteenth designation, he said, "is important to educate Vermonters … that there is a legacy in the country that is less pleasant."

But Boyd-Hill said the legacy of slavery continues to impede the pursuit of happiness for many Vermonters of color.

"When we go to the bank, when we go for housing, when we try to attempt any number of things, by gosh they're still beating up on us," Boyd-Hill said.

The relative lack of awareness of racism in Vermont, Boyd-Hill said, can be attributed to the fact that its residents are overwhelmingly white.

"Your kids don't get beat up and harassed at school, but little black children and children from other places do," Boyd-Hill said. "People aren't willing to understand and accept the racism that does exist here … So many people do racist things without realizing it's racist."

Robert Appel, head of the Vermont Human Rights Commission, said empirical data may corroborate Boyd-Hill's analysis. A snapshot of the state's incarcerated population in 2006 revealed that African Americans comprise fully 10 percent of all inmates, a proportion that far exceeds that minority's general population rate.

Anywhere from 10 percent to 15 percent of housing discrimination complaints filed with the Human Rights Commission are race-based, though people of color account for only about 5 percent of all Vermonters.

In schools, too, Appel said, data indicates that children of color are harassed more often than their white schoolmates. In 2003 and 2004, according to Department of Education statistics, about 10 percent of all school harassment claims filed were race-based, even though children of color accounted for only about 5 percent of the school-age population.

"Race-based complaints across the board are disproportionately higher than the number of people of color in Vermont," Appel said. "By most indicators, it would appear there continues to be a disadvantage to being nonwhite in Vermont. And the perception that Vermont is somehow free of this I think is based on a lack of understanding of what it's like to be nonwhite."

Reed said even symbolic gestures, like recognizing Juneteenth, will breed the kind of education and awareness needed to bridge whatever racial divide exists in the state.

"Racism is born of ignorance, and this is an opportunity to educate Vermonters not only to the legacy of slavery, but also to give hope and opportunity for a more inclusive and more equitable Vermont," Reed said.

Wanda Hines, who works for social equity with the Burlington Legacy Project, said Vermonters' apparent willingness to navigate the often uncomfortable topic of race relations will breed greater understanding and more inclusive communities.

"Strands of dialogue," according to Hines, like the roundtables on racial profiling by law-enforcement officers scheduled for later this week in Burlington, serve to ameliorate whatever racism still exists in Vermont.

"Innately we fear what we don't know. If we ask the hard questions, involve ourselves with the people around us, we'll be OK," Hines said.

The Juneteenth designation, she said, moves Vermont closer toward that goal.

"I think it's a validating moment," Hines said. "It's a great acknowledgement of where we've been, and it also speaks to where we need to go."

Douglas said he plans to host a more proper Juneteenth celebration later this month, though the law doesn't go into effect until July 1, so the first official celebration won't take place until next year.

And state workers won't get an extra day off next year. Paid holidays are negotiated during union bargaining sessions.


"......Distinguishing TRUTH from falsehood" 'Change your words into truth And then change that truth into LOVE, And maybe our children's grandchildren , And their great-grandchildren will tell.'
 
Posts: 522 | Registered: November 12, 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Wiz
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quote:
The holiday, to be celebrated annually on the third Saturday of June

What kind of sellout BS is that? Saturday?


Knocking jockeys off the lawn for over 50 years
 
Posts: 1716 | Registered: November 09, 2007Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Bad Mother Fucker



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Now... If they could just get some Black people...


What's the difference between a "racial" and an "ethnic" minority?


Peace,

AudioGuy


*************************************************
"I am African, not because I was born in Africa; but because Africa was born in me"

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"The cost of Liberty is less than the cost of repression."

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"... can you imagine Doobie in yo' funk??!!"

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"...Black men walkin' / with white girls on they arms / I be mad at 'em / as if I know they moms / told to go beyond the surface / a person's a person / when we, lessen our women / our condition seems to worsen..." "Real People" - Common

"You are not supposed to be so blind with patriotism that you can not face reality. Wrong is wrong no matter who says it or does it!" -Malcolm X

Sense is far from COMMON!


... The tragic irony here is that a lot of African Americans may not fully recognize the implications of this decision for years to come. Stop by any barbershop, barbeque or church basement in Black America and you will hear – with distressing frequency – that old canard that "integration" ruined the Black community.

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Posts: 3335 | Registered: June 14, 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
C5
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quote:
Now... If they could just get some Black people...


ohsnap 20 20
 
Posts: 278 | Registered: March 26, 2008Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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The Emancipation Proclamation was signed in 1863, but slavery persisted in Confederate-controlled Texas, whose government refused to enforce Lincoln's seminal edict. On June 19, 1863, Union Gen. Gordon Granger arrived in Texas to take possession of the state and free its slaves. The holiday is celebrated widely in the South.---article

I am all for holidays celebrating people and events significant for African Americans, but...

Sometimes even we don't, or can't, get it right.

This Juneteenth celebration has always struck me as ill-conceived.

First: The Emancipation Proclamation had no jurisdiction in the States of the Confederacy...since those States composed a separate nation.

Second: The Emancipation Proclamation specifically excluded all the States and territories controlled by The Union and/or its armies.

Consequently, and in effect, The Emancipation Proclamation did not...could not...free a single soul.

But the thought is nice.


PEACE

Jim Chester


African Americans for African America
http://iaanh2.org


African American
Pledge of Unity

We stand, Together, after left alone in a land we never knew. We Bind ourselves, Together, with the blood and will of Those who have gone before. From the Bodies of our Ancestors thrown away, from the Pieces of Ourselves left to perish, We rise as One, a New Body in a New Land, a New People in a New Nation. Of Common Mind, Body, and Spirit, By Declaration of our Amalgamated Individual and Personal Authorities, We Are African America.

© James Wesley Chester 2004; 2008

You are who you say you are. Your children are who you say you are.
 
Posts: 8479 | Registered: August 05, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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