The Importance of Juneteenth – Past and Present – As Told Through Spoken Word
June 19, 2019 | J.P. Haley | 2 min read
Juneteenth is a momentous day for families throughout the U.S., a day that commemorates the liberation of slaves. Watch summer intern J.P. Haley’s spoken word performance on what Juneteenth means to him.
“Please Remember” Transcript:
Emancipation Proclamation
Lincoln said it with pride
By law we were free, every right to go strive
But
Many didn’t listen to ’em
They just wanted our lives until
June 19th, 1865
General Gordon Granger hit Texas with a surprise, he
Told ’em the war was over so give us freedom its time
But still despite the delight
We still fight with the sour side
We weren’t free they just announced it
Still they kept us in binds
Still they kept us in chains
Freedom conceived was fake
Gave us the door to leave and then shot us when we escaped
But step in the right direction so
Why don’t we know this day?
Well first of all not even acknowledged in 50 states
It’s like the war wasn’t finished
Segregation tension
Now today police done found a new way to Lynch us
Past is overlooked our books can’t even give a mention
Wasn’t on my iPhone till last year
Ridiculous
This is our independence
Celebration intended
Need some exposition or forever stuck in beginnings
So here I am to remind
Please remember the time
Please remember for those in the shadows tryna hide it
Remember for those who died
Remember for all who tried
Scream it out on the streets till yo voice is raspy and dry
We gone end all the silence
Bring our day to the light
So join me to recognize
The day of Juneteenth, 1865
– J.P. Haley is a Kansas City PBS intern
Reading these stories is free, but telling them is not. Start your monthly gift now to support Flatland’s community-focused reporting.
Related Stories
A Better Big Blue Battlefield in Kansas City | Part II
Editor’s note: This is the second installment of a three-part series on the restoration of the Big Blue Battlefield in Kansas City, Missouri. In the mid-19th century, overland trail teamsters driving wagons west sometimes followed a branch of the Santa Fe Trail out of Independence, using the shortcut to reach fields where the animals used…
A Better Big Blue Battlefield | Part I
Editor’s note: This is the first installment of a three-part series on the restoration of the Big Blue Battlefield in Kansas City, Missouri. It was cold for late October in Kansas City. In 1864 Lt. Patrick Henry Minor, then leading an artillery battery against Confederate forces, would die the following March, from what likely had…
Historic Earthquakes Accounts Guide Modern First Responders
On December 16, 1811, a U.S. Army officer stationed in the soon-to-be-established Missouri Territory woke just after 2 a.m. reacting to what he described as a “great agitation”, an earthquake. Several of the officer’s guards, he soon wrote to a friend, “could scarcely keep their feet” during the shaking, which he said lasted about eight…

