Rarely do I agree with Mark Krikorian, a conspicuously strident advocate of keeping everybody who isn’t already here out of the country, but there is an occasional exception:
Today is Juneteenth, marking the day [in 1865] when the slaves of Texas finally learned of the Emancipation Proclamation. Commemoration of the day has spread far beyond Texas, and I wish we’d replace Martin Luther King’s birthday on the holiday calendar with Juneteenth. The objection that making MLK Day a national holiday puts him up with Jesus Christ and George Washington is legitimate, even if it was disingenuous on the part of some. But there obviously is a need in our national holidays for a day to celebrate the emancipation (from both slavery and Jim Crow) of black fellow-countrymen, not just as a black thing, but as an American thing. A celebration with roots in history, that has developed and spread spontaneously, is infinitely preferable to picking the birthday (in January, no less) of a single man.
One of my longstanding gripes is that official holidays bunch up between Thanksgiving and Washington’s Birthday. A step that both improves that situation and fits better with history is an unalloyed good.
BTW, there is a Juneteenth Web site, which is more than one can say for most holidays.
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