06.19.1865
JUNE TEENTH a celebration and collective scream with the movement we work for.
Friend,
This year, we're a little wiser, a little more weary, and getting braver and more honest every day. We won't pretend that harm stopped on June 19, 1865 – Juneteenth, the oldest nationally celebrated commemoration of the ending of slavery in the United States. We feel it in our bones as we work toward a world that is more free, where we are empowered to face the harm we cause and heal from the harm we experience.
Here at NHRC, we're thinking hard about what it means for 2021 to mark 50 years of the drug war, and how intersecting oppressions continue to harm our people. We're reflecting and strategizing for the movement marathons ahead. Our office is closed the week of June 14th-19th in observance of Juneteenth, and when we get back, we'll be digging in to a summer-long series of events, panels, discussions unpacking 50 years of oppressive drug policy and where we go from here.
We have so much to celebrate, however. The lessons we've learned about how to hold each other better and how to support out loud will be with us as we march forward. The knowledge that our anger is righteous as we let our screams come when we feel them. The knowledge that when the time is right, we will hold each other again.
With hope,
Monique Tula
P.S. We know you'll be missing our usual Our Movement in Motion Newsletter during our office closure. Don't worry, we included some whispers from the internet below for you to scroll through until we're back! Links to click!
As I was thinking about Juneteenth and why specifically it is an imperative moment to commemorate I thought about a quote my dad sent to me (from this article) that I saved in an old cell phone and later printed out to share with my children about Juneteenth. It reads as follows:
— Dr. Orisha Bowers REGIONAL DIRECTOR OF HEPCONNECT National Harm Reduction Coalition Changed your mind? unsubscribe |