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Nine events to check out for a faith-centered Juneteenth
(RNS) — Across the country, faith groups are gearing up for Juneteenth celebrations that weave spirituality and history.
A Celebrate Juneteenth sign during a Juneteenth parade on June 18, 2022, in East Point, Ga. (AP Photo/Brynn Anderson)

(RNS) — On June 19, 1865, slaves in Galveston, Texas, finally got news of their liberation — two years after President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation abolishing slavery.

Ever since, Texans have celebrated the end of slavery on Juneteenth, a melding of the words “June” and “nineteenth.” Juneteenth was designated as a day of observance in Texas in 1980, followed by Oklahoma, Minnesota and Florida in the 1990s.

In 2020, after the deadly police shooting of Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky, and the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis by police, Juneteenth gained recognition nationwide. Between 2020 and 2023, the celebration was made a public holiday in many states, including Kentucky, Minnesota, Louisiana, Utah and the District of Columbia. President Joe Biden declared Juneteenth a national holiday in 2021.


This year, as the Trump administration targets initiatives related to Black history to roll back federal commitments to diversity, equity and inclusion, uncertainty looms around any potential Juneteenth celebrations at the White House. And in some cities — including Indianapolis; Bend, Oregon; and Plano, Illinois — Juneteenth celebrations have been canceled.

Across the country, faith groups are gearing up for Juneteenth events that weave spirituality and history. Here’s a sampling.

An ecumenical prayer service

The Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America is organizing an ecumenical prayer service on Juneteenth at the Greek Orthodox Church and National Shrine in New York City. Titled Healing the Wounds of Slavery,” it is based on an Akathist hymn, a devotional poem praising the Virgin Mary.

The service, coordinated by the Greek Orthodox Church’s Mission to the African Diaspora in the Americas West Indies and the Caribbean, will honor “the saints of Africa, and American luminaries, the Holy ones who strove during the ills of slavery in the Americas, Reconstruction, and Jim Crow semi slavery and segregation.”

A day of work restoring a Black cemetery

For Juneteenth, members of St. Clare’s Episcopal Church in Ann Arbor, Michigan, will help restore Washtenaw County’s only Black cemetery. Opened in 1946 by Pastor Garther Roberson Sr., the Woodlawn cemetery is the resting place of approximately 150 African Americans who couldn’t be buried in other cemeteries during segregation.

Participants in the Woodlawn cemetery restoration day of service will learn how to remove overgrowth, find lost headstones and help document the history of the site. A flyer for the event advises participants to bring gardening tools.


A Juneteenth marketplace

New Birth Missionary Baptist Church will showcase 100 Black-owned businesses at a pop-up marketplace to promote Black entrepreneurship. The event will be held on Saturday (June 21) and Sunday (June 22), at the church’s Family Life Center in Stonecrest, Georgia.

The event is a continuation of the church’s recent Bullseye Black Market. On Easter weekend, the congregation hosted a three-day marketplace as part of a boycott of Target stores to protest the company’s rollback on its diversity, equity and inclusion commitments.


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