Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Special Feature: Selected Poems for Reflections on Juneteenth

My Dear Friends:

Today marks the Juneteenth federal holiday in the United States that commemorates the day in 1865 when enslaved people in Galveston, Texas, learned of their freedom more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation. "Despite Republican efforts to ban the teaching of accurate Black history in schools, Juneteenth became a federal holiday in 2022, signalling that Black history is American history. While this is not an official holiday in Canada, it is significant for thinking about the history of race, racial relations and education. Canada and the United States - once part of the British Empire - share a settler-colonial history. It is in this context that ideas about race were developed and circulated." (The Conversation, June 15: "Juneteenth matters for thinking about race relations in Canada and Canadian education")

Therefore, I would like to share with you a set of selected haiku and tanka for your reflections on the significance and impacts of Juneteenth.


Selected Haiku and Tanka:

slave cemetery
i scrape the moss to find
no name

William M. Ramsey

explaining Jim Crow
to my freshman students
the gulf
between cries
of cicadas

Laurence Stacey 

it’s hard
to prove racism --
something
dark and intangible
accumulating inside me 

Kozue Uzawa

passing the shadow
of the George Floyd mural wall
white cops on the beat

a Black man
cried, and cried out for his mother
then went quiet ...
years later my friend is stopped
and frisked on the same bloody spot

Chen-ou Liu


To conclude today's special feature post, I would like to share with you the follow remarks:

We shall overcome because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice. 

-- Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Civil Rights Activist and Minister

Hold those things that tell your history and protect them.

-- Maya Angelou, Memoirist, Poet, and Civil Rights Activist


FYI: Rabble, June 13: International body launches ‘special review’ of Canadian Human Rights Commission: 

The Canadian Human Rights Commission has faced years of accusations of bias and discrimination against its own Black employees.

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