From Kerri Kelly (CTZNWELL) <[email protected]>
Subject Until we're all free
Date June 18, 2021 12:49 AM
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The Senate unanimously voting to make Juneteenth a holiday should confuse you.
@Yesaurielle reminded us that gaslighting is making Juneteenth a federal holiday while simultaneously attacking black voting rights, endorsing state sanctioned violence, dismantling the social safety net and passing laws to prevent schools from telling the truth of our racist history.
Don’t be fooled, we’ve got work to do. May Juneteenth be a call to action to never stop until we’re all free.
Kerri (she/her)
Art by @arielsole
Loss runs like a river through my life: [[link removed]] Malkia Devich-Cyril on grief’s unequal racial burden, and the Internet as a vehicle to negotiate survival and turn collective grief into collective action. [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
Running out of conspiracy theories to match their IQAnon, Republican politicians have discovered “critical rage theory” [[link removed]]as the next worst thing to endanger American civilization. [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
Gymnastics doesn’t know what to do with Simone Biles’s dominance. Her greatness is a form of resistance. [[link removed]][click to tweet] [[link removed]]
The hidden form of racism that no one is talking about [[link removed]]: how the food industry perpetuates social injustice on the most vulnerable. [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
As Juneteenth becomes a federal holiday, the US needs a culture of reparations [[link removed]] for the very real damages that states, cities, universities, churches, and companies inflicted on Black Americans. [click to tweet] [[link removed]]
Juneteenth isn’t just a day for Black Americans, it is day for all Americans to recommit to our fight for freedom, dignity and the future that we all deserve. As Fannie Lou Hamer reminds us “nobody’s free until everybody’s free”. Here are some meaningful ways to engage:
LEARN: Where does Juneteenth come from? Know the history [[link removed]].
SUPPORT: Invest in Black-owned businesses (list [[link removed]]) and organizations that support Black freedom and flourishing (list) [[link removed]].
DEFUND: There is no emancipation as long as Black people continue to be targeted by police violence. This is a good time to raise hell around defunding the police [[link removed]]and redistributing resources to community-led services.
REPAIR: Juneteenth is not just a celebration but a reminder of our debt for the enslavement, violence and exploitation Black people throughout history in America. Reparations is how we, non-Black people, make it right. [[link removed]]
ATTEND: Check out these amazing Juneteenth events:
Black Love Convergence [[link removed]]: Check out “Ancestral Voices: Healing Black Futures” featuring Gina Breedlove, Lisa Anderson, Malkia Devich-Cyril and Karen M. Rose.
Juneteenth Now: Get Us Free [[link removed]]: Celebrate with Middle Church featuring a star-studded panel and teach in.
The Black Sit: Where Liberation Meets Practice [[link removed]]: A radical meditation featuring Rev angel Kyodo williams and friends.
Art by @zeaink
Juneteenth represents the day that last remaining enslaved people in Galveston Texas finally learned they were free. While the Emancipation Proclamation was signed on Jan 1st, 1863, news of their freedom did not reach the people until June 19th, 1865. While Black Independence Day has been around for hundreds of years, it hasn’t been recognized by the general public until recently. After last year’s racial protests, allies, companies and schools rushed to acknowledge the day with fancy social media posts, time off and celebrations. But symbolic gestures towards liberation don’t mean much when so many are suffering. After all, how do we celebrate Juneteenth when we can’t even talk about racism? There’s no small irony in the fact that in Texas this week, the state where the holiday originated, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott signed a law [[link removed]] limiting how educators can talk about current events and America’s history of racism. Juneteenth isn’t just a recognition of the survival and resilience of Black people in America, it is a call to action for the rest of us to do whatever is necessary to protect Black lives and ensure that everyone has what they need to thrive. That means doing the everyday work of fighting for voting rights, defunding the police, redistributing resources to front-line communities, paying reparations and embodying joy as a revolutionary force [[link removed]].
We are the new ancestors in training. Act accordingly.
Art and words by @lamalayerbalove
CTZNWELL is community powered and crowd-sourced. That’s how we keep it real. Please consider joining us on Patreon [[link removed]] for as little as $2/month so that we can keep doing the work of creating content that matters for CTZNs who care.

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