The Meaning of Freedom on New Year’s Day
January 1, 2018
Happy New Year from Baileyblog! We have been in operation now almost a year and are happy to be adding our voice to historical and contemporary debates. For those new to Baileyblog, we publish every weekend on issues regarding race, slavery, refugees, diasporas, African, African American and Caribbean Studies, human rights, history and memory.
Happy New Year from Baileyblog! We have been in operation now almost a year and are happy to be adding our voice to historical and contemporary debates. For those new to Baileyblog, we publish every weekend on issues regarding race, slavery, refugees, diasporas, African, African American and Caribbean Studies, human rights, history and memory.
Thank you
for a great year! We hope you will keep reading and sharing the blog with
others. Each month, we are reaching more and more readers and your support has made all the difference.
As it is New
Year’s Day, I have been thinking about what that day meant for over four
million slaves one hundred and fifty four years ago. In a word, it meant freedom—long fought for,
long prayed for freedom. See below an
excerpt from The Weeping Time in the last chapter, “History and the Democratization
of Memory,” which tries to capture the spirit of that momentous day:
The United States of
America was built on some of the highest ideals that man had ever espoused at
any time in history. The Declaration of
Independence’s “All men are created equal” was a clarion call for freedom—but
as it turns out, only freedom for some.
The Republic was established with
the aid of slave labor and with a blind eye to slavery.
The Emancipation Proclamation in so
many ways reaches back to Jefferson’s hallowed document and fills in the
missing pieces. It at once represents an advance
but also a corrective: a 250-year-old
wrong is corrected with one stroke of a pen.
What that meant to African Americans, we have already discussed:
freedom was the long and elusive goal, always at the center of hopes and
prayers. Its
delay made the reality of it all the more sweet, so it is no wonder that some
African Americans, particularly those in the South still celebrate a service called Watchnight on New Year’s
eve. Watchnight is a church service in
which they celebrate God’s deliverance of them from slavery on that fateful
night. In this way, it is similar
to Jewish Passover seder celebrations.
But
this event not only changed their lives, it changed the entire country. It
would set America on the road towards
equality and civil rights that it is still on today. It was not to be a
straight line to full and total equality, for there would be setbacks and backlash,
but a door had been opened that could not be easily shut. Inasmuch as that was the case, this Emancipation
Act was a monumental victory for all Americans. It has been
said before that slavery was not unique to North America and the
West. There
are many historical examples, but surely what is unique in this case was the
height of those tremendous ideals about freedom and equality – ALL men are
created equal—and the fight to make those ideals a reality. They truly become a reality when the
Emancipation Proclamation comes into effect.
The Emancipation Proclamation gave those words true power and thus is
worth commemorating not just on the 150th anniversary, but every year, as a reminder of great progress and
even leadership in this area around the world.
Anne C. Bailey
(Cambridge University Press, 2017)
Image courtesy of cleanpublicdomain.com
On the Road with The Weeping Time...
New Reviews:
From USA TODAY
https://www.usatoday.com/story/entertainment/books/2017/12/20/weeping-time/960904001/
New Video:
Youtube interview with author
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ABUZcObLc_8&list=PLC5C19446D4A9D994
The Meaning of Freedom on New Year’s Day
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January 01, 2018
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