Celebrating 10 Years Of Black History: Special Delivery!

Juneteenth E-Zine

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Black History: Special Delivery!

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Black History Learning Lab E-Zine, Issue #1
The
Black History Learning Lab
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Issue #1 · Vol. 1
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Delivering Black History Special Delivery Since 2015
Feature Story
Juneteenth: Celebration or Commemoration? That Is The Question.
161 years after Galveston, Black America is still debating what June 19th actually means, and both sides are right.
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Juneteenth: Celebration or Commemoration?
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Every June 19th America asks Black people to celebrate. But celebrate what exactly? The announcement of a freedom that was already two and a half years late? The beginning of a refugee crisis with no aid? The first chapter of a promise broken before the month was out?

Here is what Juneteenth actually is, and what Black America has always known it to be. Not a celebration of what was given. A commemoration of what was survived. And those are not the same thing.

“We are not celebrating what America did for Black people on June 19, 1865. We are celebrating what Black people did for themselves, before, during, and after a system specifically designed to make their survival impossible.”

Four million people were freed into nothing. No land. No money. No documents. No protection. Within months 40 acres promised by Sherman’s Special Field Order No. 15 were taken back and returned to Confederate landowners. The Freedmen’s Bureau was defunded. The KKK was founded in December 1865. And the 13th Amendment contained a loophole that immediately authorized re-enslavement through the criminal justice system.

And yet, Black literacy went from 5% to over 70% within one generation. Black people built schools, churches, banks, newspapers, and entire towns. They placed thousands of Information Wanted advertisements searching for children and parents sold away, and some of them found each other. That refusal to accept that love was gone forever is the real Juneteenth story.

Did You Know
Did You Know

Emancipation Park in Houston, where Juneteenth has been celebrated since 1872, was purchased by formerly enslaved people because they were banned from celebrating in public parks. They pooled $800 to buy the land themselves. That park still exists today.

Then & Now
June 19, 1865

General Granger reads General Order No. 3 in Galveston, announcing freedom 2.5 years late. Four million people are freed into homelessness, landlessness, and immediate legal peril through Black Codes.

Today, 2026

The 13th Amendment exception clause still exists. According to the Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances (2022), median white family wealth is $188,000 vs. $24,000 for Black families, the compound interest of 40 acres stolen in 1865. Juneteenth became federal in 2021.

BlackMail Trivia
What was the name of Sherman’s order that gave formerly enslaved people 40 acres, later reversed by Andrew Johnson?
“Another installment of Melanated Mail has been delivered.
Ponder, reflect, and pass it on.”
Quote of the Week
Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced, where ignorance prevails, and where any one class is made to feel that society is an organized conspiracy to oppress, rob, and degrade them, neither persons nor property will be safe.
, Frederick Douglass, 1886
Explore Further
Interactive Tool
The Juneteenth Explorer
Ask Isibani, our Juneteenth Explorer Guide, anything about Juneteenth, the history, the betrayal, the resilience, the figures, the myths. Free. No signup. The history they skipped, right here.
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Another installment of melanated mail has been delivered. Ponder, reflect and pass it on.

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