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Juneteenth

For those who chose the sea, refers to the Middle Passage was a section of the triangular Atlantic slave trade that saw the forced transport of millions of West Africans to the new world. Rather than be enslaved, many jumped overboard, literally choosing the sea over enslavement. This is where the phrase comes from and is observed on Juneteenth.

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That’s not correct. Juneteenth is a contraction of June 19th, which was the day word that they were free reached the last group of enslaved people in Texas to hear it.
SatanBurger · 36-40, F
@LeopoldBloom I should have worded it differently but the phrase has been recognized as part of Juneteenth.

June 19, or Juneteenth, is a new federal holiday codifying an observation which has taken place annually for over a century. On June 19, 1865 US federal troops finally began the occupation of Texas, the final state of the rebellious Confederate states to be occupied. One of the earliest orders of business was the public reading of the Emancipation Proclamation, which had been issued nearly two and a half years earlier, but obviously the proclamation had no effect in areas not responding to US law. Juneteenth represents the de jure end of slavery in the former Confederacy, although enforcement took some time.

In recent years, a second commemoration has become a part of many Juneteenth observances. Specifically, an observance to remember “those who chose the sea", who leapt overboard rather than accept life as a slave, has been instituted. It is intended as a refutation of “Lost Cause" revisionism which holds that slaves happily accepted their fate.

https://www.quora.com/What-is-Juneteenth-for-those-who-chose-the-sea#
What I didn't know was that it actually goes back to 1866.
losthorizons · 51-55, M
East Africa is now the space trade of the world. Why is no one talking about that or helping those poor people ?
SatanBurger · 36-40, F
@losthorizons Because it's June 19th so the post is on topic about that specifically. Not meaning to ignore anything else really.

You kind of sound petty though, who wants to list off all the other news around the world like this nullifies the post or something.

Like oh yeah well a woman died in the news today, why aren't you talking about that on this irrelevant post HUH HUH HUH

🤣
losthorizons · 51-55, M
Actually no it doesn’t.
SatanBurger · 36-40, F
@losthorizons Yeah it does.

June 19, or Juneteenth, is a new federal holiday codifying an observation which has taken place annually for over a century. On June 19, 1865 US federal troops finally began the occupation of Texas, the final state of the rebellious Confederate states to be occupied. One of the earliest orders of business was the public reading of the Emancipation Proclamation, which had been issued nearly two and a half years earlier, but obviously the proclamation had no effect in areas not responding to US law. Juneteenth represents the de jure end of slavery in the former Confederacy, although enforcement took some time.

In recent years, a second commemoration has become a part of many Juneteenth observances. Specifically, an observance to remember “those who chose the sea", who leapt overboard rather than accept life as a slave, has been instituted. It is intended as a refutation of “Lost Cause" revisionism which holds that slaves happily accepted their fate.

https://www.quora.com/What-is-Juneteenth-for-those-who-chose-the-sea#

 
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