By Sandra Crenshaw
Another Black History Month has come and gone. And like the Preliminary Emancipation Proclamation that warned the leadership of the rebellious states in the south on September 22, 1862, that they had 100 days to return to the United States before President Lincoln freed the slaves out of bondage on January 1, 1863.
We now have 100 days before the Texas Emancipation Day. Inspired by the Biblical book of Exodus -that people of African descent shall never forget the day they were set free and to celebrate the date with a feast.
The 19th of June is now a federal holiday. But some Black folks, who migrated to other states for job opportunities, returned to have their family reunions in June. There are those who work for corporations, not too eager to allow their employees off in the middle of the week, they celebrate emancipation on the Monday after the third Saturday in June.
I am lobbying all governmental agencies in Harris and Dallas County and the State of Texas to follow the lead of several states and the City of Austin, Texas that celebrates Texas Emancipation Day on the Monday after the 3d Saturday in June. As you know Travis County, Texas, held the oldest celebration in Texas in 1866 with a political rally and the government served barbeque.
The State of Texas employees maintain a three-tier holiday schedule. Our Legislature made Texas Emancipation Day a state holiday in 1980, but it is an optional holiday, and the state does not pay when an optional holiday is on a Saturday or Sunday.
Since Black folks labored for free for over 250 years, the rebellious state of Texas that bans Black history and suppresses voter participation and has the largest penal system in the world with no reparations, the least the State of Texas can do is to have a mandatory Texas Emancipation Day holiday with full pay including Saturdays and Sundays beginning in 2024.
We feel that the Federal government will take the lead from Texas government agencies and make Emancipation Day on a Monday after the third Saturday in June or Friday before the 3rd Saturday in June.
Sandra Crenshaw, a historian and genealogist, is a 5th generation Texan with family ties in Goliad and Travis County, Texas. She can be reached at lacpac2011@yahoo.com and by cell at 214-498-5298 or 972-262-7999.
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