Juneteenth, Freedom and Financial Bondage: From Dr. Anne C. Bailey’s Blog

I am shamelessly copying and pasting from my friend Dr. Anne C. Bailey’s blog. You can find the link here. Anne blogs (and writes books, and teaches) about race, slavery, refugees, diasporas, African American, Caribbean and African studies, human rights, history, and memory.” I always learn so much from her. Here is her latest post, in honor of Dr. Ron Myers and “Juneteenth.” There’s a very interesting point here too, about financial bondage. Does this sound familiar, to any of us?

Thank you, Dr. Anne C. Bailey, for another thoughtful article…

A Life Well Spent: RIP, Dr. Ron Myers

I have been thinking a lot about a life well spent.  It is not about fame or fortune or even length of years. Dr. Ron Myers, a man of faith, lived and died so honorably. He was a doctor, a preacher, a musician, and an activist. For years, he lobbied US Presidents and other government officials to support a National Juneteenth Holiday Observance. In his honor, I am reposting the following article that was originally published on June 25,2017.

 Thank you, Dr. Ron Myers, for your inspiration and for a life well spent.

December 1, 2009: Gov. Jim Doyle signed a measure at noon in Milwaukee that recognized Juneteenth Day as a holiday. Here the crowd cheers around the Governor (center) as he finishes signing the bill. Rev. Ronald Myers (right with flag in pocket) heads up the National Juneteenth Day Observation Society. Directly behind the Governor in white is Mona Adams Winston. Left of the Governor is Mac Weddle, Exec. Director of Northcott Neighborhood House (gray suit) and then Wisconsin Senator Spencer Coggs. (Photo: MICHAEL SEARS/MSEARS@JOURNALSENTINEL.COM

Juneteenth, Freedom and Financial Bondage

As someone who writes a lot about slavery in history, until fairly recently, I never associated slavery with financial bondage. This past week, many members of the African American community and others celebrated Juneteenth. Juneteenth refers to June 19, 1865 – the day that slaves in Texas officially received news of their freedom. This was a full two-and-a-half years after Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation. Since that time, a number of African Americans have been celebrating this day as Emancipation Day. It is a commemoration that is growing in popularity with physician and preacher, Dr. Ronald Myers and many statewide Juneteeth commissions around the country at the forefront of the movement to promote Juneteenth as a national holiday.

Dr. Ron Myers played the trumpet. (Photo: juneteenthjazz.com)

The celebration this week in Binghamton and elsewhere got me thinking about what it must have been like for those African Americans who had waited and struggled so hard for their freedom only to find out 2 and half years later that they were already free. It got me thinking that just as with Juneteenth, sometimes freedom comes in phases. Sometimes, freedom, as per the poet Langston Hughes, is like a dream deferred.

When I think of challenges in the Black community today, many things come to mind but not the least of which is the issue of finances. To be sure, even in these tough times, there is still a strong Black middle class and a subsection of folks who are very well off financially. There exist, however, still far too many living on the edge or below the poverty line.

Today, I am standing with Pastor DeForest Soaries Jr., whose book, D-FREE:Breaking Free from Financial Slavery, has literally become a movement within the black community. In this book, he likens physical shackles to both spiritual and financial shackles.  Yes, he is extremely concerned about the systemic changes that need to take place in American society particularly in the areas of education and criminal justice; yes, he is deeply knowledgeable of the limits of institutionalized racism, yet he has also made a conscious decision to focus on what he and other members of the community can change. His book, which is full of his own personal stories, as well as those of his family and his church, shows that burdensome debt (not asset-based debt) is in many ways like slavery. It keeps you in bondage and keeps dreams at bay.

Like the Black Texans who were free but waiting for the official news, debt can keep you operating at a very low level because as we say in Jamaica, it ties your foot. It’s a burden that keeps many from home ownership, from building up education funds or even establishing emergency funds for the family.  Most of all, it can cut off the ability to dream and to move beyond boundaries.

For example, he tells an excellent story of a woman who had a job and was working hard but also was struggling to make ends meet. She got a parking ticket and did not have the cash to pay it right away; she delayed paying it because of other mounting bills and then her license got suspended. A suspended license meant that she lost her job because she needed her car to get to her job. Counseling resources at the church, as well as enrollment in the debt-free program, eventually got her back on her feet but it was not overnight.

At the same time, he contrasted this situation with his grandmother who had a sixth-grade education but always had money to lend – often money she kept in her stockings and would bring out just at the right time. In so many ways, Soaries is encouraging members of the Black community to look back and look forward to asking themselves if they are really living out their freedom.

So freedom has been won, freedom has been given, but for freedom to be fully experienced –it may be that one part of the journey is to get debt free.

Powerful message and a powerful way in which the memory of the past, in this case, Juneteenth, can be helpful to many in the present.

Anne C. Bailey

New Book:  The Weeping Time: Memory and the Largest Slave Auction in American History  (Cambridge University Press, 2017)

website: https://www.annecbailey.net


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