From the Hill to Dixwell, New Haveners celebrated Juneteenth with dance, soul food, and investments in Black businesses.
Two Juneteenth events were celebrated less than two miles away from one another at Sandra’s Next Generation restaurant in the Hill and Connecticut Violence Intervention Program’s space at 230 Ashmun St.
Each gathering hosted dozens of New Haveners to celebrate the holiday, which marks the proclamation of the end of slavery in Texas on June 19, 1865. It commemorates the emancipation of enslaved African Americans through the power of unity and circulating black dollars. The holiday has grown in popularity, especially since the Black Lives Matters police accountability protests of the past year. This week it became a federal holiday.
“Freedom Brunch”
Owners of Congress Avenue’s Sandra’s Next Generation, Miguel and Sandra Pittman, cleared the restaurant’s parking lot to host their first annual Juneteenth festival. The all-day event began as a brunch, then an afternoon cookout, and finally an after-hours party.
New Haveners were seated on one side for a plate of chicken and waffles, cajun chicken devil eggs, or fish and grits, while 11 Black vendors participated and sold their art, clothing, jewelry, and healthy snacks on the other side of the lot.
The Pittmans’ four kids organized the event. They invited operators Black-owned businesses from New York, Georgia, and Alabama to join the gathering.
While artist Tracey Massey sold her paintings, custom clothing, and handmade jewelry at the Hill festival, she thought about her mother, who raised her around entrepreneurship by selling candy apples and popcorn.
“We’re building another Wall Street,” she said.
Massey lives in the Hill and has been eating at Sandra’s for the past 25 years.
After brunch, visitors stopped at vendor tables and tasted samples of seamoss and rubbed a thick and creamy shea butter Ghanian formula on their hands.
“This is about freedom and working towards a better future,” said Sandra.
Dance Party For Empowerment
The Amistad Committee and Connecticut 29th Colored Regiment C.V. Infantry hosted its fourth annual Juneteenth festival at the Connecticut Violence Intervention Program’s outdoor space on Ashmun Street in Dixwell.
A dance party erupted at the event led by youth who later invited in young children and seniors to join.
Solar Power dancers Tyler Jackson, Dashawn Davis, and Gabriel Francis (among those pictured at the top of this story) performed for the crowd after an impromptu dance circle with New Haven natives and sisters Shannon Mone’t, Sharon, and Crystal Dickey.
The group danced in sync to songs like “Poison” by Bell Biv DeVoe and “It Takes Two” by Rob Base. DJ EZ Rock played by the Rahsaan Langley Band.
Amistad Committee Juneteenth celebration
Posted by New Haven Independent on Saturday, June 19, 2021
Organizers Kai Perry, Meredith Benson, and Kelly Mero invited local vendors to the event. Dozens of community organizations also tabled at the event, offering program sign-ups, resources, and local services. New Haven Reads Site Director Audra Clark distributed free books to youth and parents Saturday. Several food trucks lined the street to provide free meals.
Fire Chief John Alston Jr. invited Ancient African Formula owner Aminata Dukuray from New Jersey to the event to sell her imported art, clothing, jewelry, and skin care products made by her family in Gambia. The proceeds made from at the event will be donated to build a school for youth in Dukuray’s home of Gambia.
Mauro-Sheridan Interdistrict Magnet School support staff member Sean Hardy said he hopes celebrations continue citywide surrounding Black success and hope. He suggested future celebrations include a focus on teaching youth life skills like communication with positive and consistent programming.
“This is like a push that we can make it,” Hardy said. “But we don’t just need that once a year. We need it more often.”
Local artist Jesse Wolf displayed his most recent pieces after a self-care hiatus and joined with artist friends Saisha Mac and Patrick Kelly in a live paint session at Saturday’s event for participants to watch, join, or suggest ideas for the pieces.
Griffin Hospital also offered free vaccines to New Haveners during the event.
This I why I love to read history.The part they do not tell you about Juneteenth.
General Granger's actual order, which he read to people of Galveston on June 19, 1865 - - after Granger's troops had battled rebels in Louisiana, and traveled by ship to Galveston - really ought to be a part of this:
"The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. This involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and hired labor. The freedmen are advised to remain quietly at their present homes and work for wages. They are informed that they will not be allowed to collect at military posts and that they will not be supported in idleness either there or elsewhere."A part of this not emphasized nearly enough is his directive that the relation between former slaves and former "masters" was to become one "between employer and hired labor" : freed slaves were to be paid for their work..
So you see .The masters became employers and The freed slaves freed slaves.
Freedom Ride: How Not to Celebrate Juneteenth
Margaret Kimberley, BAR senior columnist
Juneteenth has become the latest iteration of liberal capture of Black politics, opportunistic virtue signaling, and the intentional misrepresentation of America's history.
"An opportunity to discuss resistance against oppression has been turned into a substance-free feel good day."
https://www.blackagendareport.com/freedom-ride-how-not-celebrate-juneteenth?fbclid=IwAR3TGjtxpNRiAXWKqCp9oO4zCIeLAFYzSJ_1vePDtOYhLY0R67o98NPyiGc