Just
outside the Oval Office hangs a painting depicting the night of
December 31, 1862. In it, African-American men, women, and children
crowd around a single pocket watch, waiting for the clock to strike
midnight and the Emancipation Proclamation to take effect. As the slaves
huddle anxiously in the dimly lit room, we can sense how even two more
minutes seems like an eternity to wait for one’s freedom. But the slaves
of Galveston, Texas, had to wait more than two years after Lincoln’s
decree and two months after Appomattox to receive word that they were
free at last.
Today
we commemorate the anniversary of that delayed but welcome news.
Decades of collective action would follow as equality and justice for
African-Americans advanced slowly, frustratingly, gradually, on our
nation’s journey toward a more perfect union. On this Juneteenth, we
remember that struggle as we reflect on how far we’ve come as a country.
The slaves of Galveston knew their freedom was only a first step, just
as the bloodied foot soldiers who crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge 100
years later knew they had to keep marching.
Juneteenth
is a time to recommit ourselves to the work that remains undone. We
remember that even in the darkest hours, there is cause to hope for tomorrow’s
light. Today, no matter our race, religion, gender, or sexual
orientation, we recommit ourselves to working to free modern-day slaves
around the world and to honoring in our own time the efforts of those
who fought so hard to steer our country truer to our highest ideals.
Source: The White House, Office of the Press Secretary
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