by Karl Duckworth, Principal Officer, US Embassy Grenada
This is my first Emancipation Day in Grenada. It is well worth celebrating that in 1833, across the British Caribbean, nearly a million people were freed from slavery.
Although we don’t have a national holiday in the United States to mark the emancipation from slavery, many states and cities have their own holiday. The District of Columbia’s Emancipation Day, celebrated on 16 April, marks the day that President Abraham Lincoln signed a decree in 1862 freeing enslaved people within the district 8 months before he would sign the Emancipation Proclamation. Or “Juneteenth,” which is celebrated in many parts of the country on 19 June, commemorates the day in 1865 after the end of our Civil War when enslaved people in Texas were finally freed.
Emancipation in the United States was a long road that required not only many brave people to speak out against cruelty and brutality, but also a civil war that claimed more than half a million lives. Even after slavery was abolished, there have been decades of struggle for equal civil rights for all Americans. Today, in the country I serve and love, people continue to demonstrate and protest lingering injustice. In our complicated history, this has become clear: sometimes, progress takes years to achieve.
Over the past weeks, as protests have continued in the United States, demonstrations in solidarity have also been held across the world, including one outside the US Embassy here in Grenada that was larger than any other in the Caribbean. Hollice Mapp, “Mr Killa,” released a music video pleading for justice that I watched with my young children as we discussed what is happening in our country, the rights of people to speak out, and how we can work together to make the world a better and more just place. Today, I am thankful to be able to teach my children about the history of Grenada’s Emancipation Day. As a father, I want them to understand how important it is that we learn from the past and what is still left to be done.
As diplomats representing the United States in Grenada, we continue this work to promote equality and justice and strengthen the bonds between our citizens and our countries. I am proud to count many Grenadians as alumni of our Young Leaders of the Americas Initiative, the Fulbright Program, and our many other exchanges. Nigel Jones, a Grenadian-American entrepreneur and app developer, headlined our recent Facebook virtual programme about how to survive and thrive in business in the midst of Covid-19. Right now, 4 Grenadian young women are participating in the Embassy’s Women in Politics Leadership Institute, facilitated in part by Minister Skeeter-Lewis, as they share best practices in achieving a more just society.
As Grenada and the West Indies celebrate Emancipation Day this year, it is a powerful reminder for me of the words enshrined in the US Declaration of Independence: “We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” When these words were written, all men and women in the new United States were not treated as equal. It is in great part because of the efforts and dedication of courageous abolitionists and activists over many years that we have come closer. On Emancipation Day, it is right to remember that those values are foundational, and we must keep striving to live up to them.
This year, there will be no large public celebrations in Grenada marking the holiday, but we can show our love for our fellow human beings right now by continuing to act with the utmost caution in the face of the Covid-19 pandemic. We will miss the music, colour, and joy, and I hope that next year we will be able to celebrate together. But even though my family and I won’t be able to celebrate in person with our Grenadian friends, we will observe Emancipation Day, rejoicing with you in that triumph over evil 187 years ago. This holiday is an affirmation and celebration of our shared humanity and the value of each human life — a recognition that we are all created equal, which is a truth we need to hold close, today and every day.
Your ignorance is astounding!!
Can you please send some of this so-called black privilege my way?
“Robert” – Your comment is Disgusting.
Don’t be a Troll.
In Grenada I see only black privilege as you all lead the lives you have chosen to live. Reparations? For what exactly?
We believe also, that mere talk is an offense to good morals. The Country which labels itself as the land of the free and home of the brave, has championed the white privilege and white supremacy philosophy around the world handed over to it by England, and has arrogantly like England, refused to start a dialogue on the matter of reparatory justice. We still believe that when nations whose ill-gotten gains are so obvious, yet whose colossal effort to suppress the information regarding it, is indeed a curse upon the earth and a clarion call for God’s judgment against it. Hypocrisy is the art of tomfoolery, and when powerful nations choose to leave out their existence like this, the emphasis to point guns at the criers are always very evident. So a policy change will subscribe to the beginning of a more honourable and peaceful world.
Well spoken.