June 19, 2024
By:Trimmel Gomes
Florida's official day to commemorate the end of
slavery is May 20, known as
"Mayteenth." However, as communities across the nation
celebrate Juneteenth, the
federal holiday marking the end of slavery in the United States, it stirs mixed
feelings among African Americans.
Despite being recognized as a federal holiday in 2021, Juneteenth has yet to
achieve official state holiday status in Florida, a point of contention for
many activists and community leaders.
Mutaqee Akbar, attorney and president of the Tallahassee Branch of the NAACP,
highlighted contradictions in Governor Ron DeSantis' approach to freedom, using
the word to his benefit.
"Talk about us surviving. You know what? We survive," Akbar
emphasized. "You're not free to teach it or read about it or any of those
things. And it's absolutely hypocritical to invoke that word freedom and not
allow freedom at the same time."
DeSantis issued a proclamation in 2020 calling on Floridians to honor
Juneteenth but efforts to make it a state holiday have stalled, with
recent legislative attempts failing.
Akbar highlighted state policies that led the NAACP to issue a travel advisory warning
African Americans, people of color, and LGBTQ+ individuals about visiting
Florida.
Akbar stressed the advisory still holds today from what he sees as continuous
attacks on African Americans.
"Things that are important to Black people. Not only education, voting,
voter suppression, redistricting, all of those things are attacks on all that
on the African American community," Akbar outlined. "I think it needs
to be addressed through these advisories."
The history of Mayteenth and Juneteenth in Florida stirs mixed feelings. Akbar
hopes it is a day of conversation as much as celebration while avoiding
commercialization. He sees it as an opportunity to teach what some have tried
to block. Although the state has observed Juneteenth since Governor Lawton
Chiles signed the Juneteenth Observance Bill into law in 1991, making it a
fully recognized state holiday remains unfinished.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida News Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service. Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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