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UID:Indybay-18886737
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CREATED:20260612T055100Z
DESCRIPTION:I was born in a City that has never learned to value its authentic 
 pre-California legacy of people of Pan African Ancestry, by 
 design.\n\nSacramento is the capital of the world’s fifth‑largest 
 economy, a city that prides itself on diversity, innovation, and 
 progressive identity. \n\nYet in 2026, Sacramento still does not recognize 
 Juneteenth as a paid City Holiday.  The reason is not procedural, 
 financial, or bureaucratic.\n\nThe reason is historical: Sacramento has 
 never valued its own Black History enough to make Juneteenth a civic 
 priority.\n\nThis absence is not accidental. It is structural. \n\nIt is 
 the product of a City that built its public memory around Gold Rush 
 mythology, pioneer triumphalism, and railroad industrialism, while erasing 
 all Pan African presence that shaped early California. \n\nSacramento’s 
 civic identity was constructed through selective remembrance — and Black 
 history was not included in the story the city chose to tell about itself 
 and is supported by alien mis-educated Negroes, who migrated into the Holy 
 Sacramento recently.\n\nYet the historical record is clear. Our Greater 
 Sacramento Region remains one of the most important centers of early 
 California Pan African Heritage, again hidden by design. \n\n1840 -1875 
 remains an open secret. \n\nIt hosted the 1855-1865 California State 
 Conventions of the Colored Citizens, the final statewide gathering of the 
 decade‑long civil rights movement that fought for testimony rights, 
 voting rights, and equal protection under the law. \n\nDelegates traveled 
 from San Francisco, Marysville, Stockton, and the mining districts to meet 
 at Bethel A.M.E. Church on Seventh Street — the oldest African American 
 church west of the Rockies — to demand full citizenship in a state that 
 denied them basic legal recognition.\n\nThese conventions were not 
 symbolic. They were strategic, disciplined, and effective. Their lobbying 
 helped secure the repeal of California’s testimony ban in 1863, a major 
 civil rights victory achieved two years before the end of the Civil War. 
 \n\nSacramento was the political center of that fight.  But today, the city 
 does not teach this history, commemorate it, or embed it into its civic 
 identity. The sites where Black delegates met, organized, and shaped state 
 policy remain unmarked, unprotected, and largely unknown.\n\nThis is the 
 deeper truth behind Sacramento’s failure to adopt Juneteenth as a paid 
 holiday: a city that does not honor its Black past will not invest in its 
 Black future.\n\nJuneteenth is more than a celebration of General Granger 
 and a 2 1/2 year story... \n\nIt is a recognition of the long struggle for 
 freedom, citizenship, and dignity — a struggle that unfolded not only in 
 Texas or the South, but here in California. \n\nSacramento had Emancipation 
 Day celebrations in the 19th century. \n\nSacramento had Black newspapers, 
 Black schools, and Black civic organizations. Sacramento had abolitionists, 
 entrepreneurs, educators, and political leaders who shaped the state’s 
 early laws. \n\nBut these stories were never woven into the city’s 
 official narrative.\n\nInstead, Sacramento allowed its Black history to be 
 buried beneath layers of redevelopment, erasure, and neglect. \n\nOld 
 Sacramento Waterfront, a site that includes documented locations tied to 
 slavery, resistance, and early Black settlement — has been commercialized 
 without historical interpretation. \n\nThe Black Gold Rush communities of 
 Negro Bar, Negro Hill, and other settlements have been marginalized or 
 misrepresented at best for an economic sad celebration of BMB, for 
 recreational sport. \n\nOur Downtown Sacramento Colored Conventions, one of 
 the most important political movements in California history, remains 
 absent from public memory.\n\nWhen a city does not value its own Black 
 history, it does not create paid holidays. It does not build monuments. It 
 does not fund heritage commissions. It does not integrate Black history 
 into its school curriculum. It does not protect historic sites. It does not 
 invest in cultural preservation. It does not see Juneteenth as essential to 
 its civic identity, thus the children do not read at grade level, by 
 design.\n\nThis is why Sacramento’s symbolic recognition of Juneteenth 
 — flag raisings, festivals, and proclamations — rings hollow. 
 \n\nSymbolism without structure is not justice. Celebration without 
 institutional commitment is not remembrance. \n\nMy hometown, a city that 
 one day will truly understand its history would not hesitate to align with 
 federal Title 5 holiday standards. \n\nA city that honors its Black 
 pioneers would not treat Juneteenth as quasi-optional notion.\n\nThe path 
 forward is clear.  Sacramento must confront the history it has ignored.  It 
 must acknowledge that early Sacramento Pioneers of Pan African ancestry 
 were not peripheral to the city’s development — they were foundational. 
 \n\nIt must recognize that the fight for freedom and citizenship did not 
 end in 1865; it continued in California’s courts, churches, schools, and 
 civic halls.  And one day the City of Sacramento will understand that 
 Juneteenth is not merely a holiday. It is a statement of values.\n\nMaking 
 Juneteenth a paid holiday is not about adding another day off.  June 19 is 
 about correcting the historical record. It is about honoring the Pan 
 African Californians who fought for rights in a state that denied them. 
 \n\nIt is about aligning Sacramento with the truth of its own past. \n\nAnd 
 it is about declaring, finally, that Black History is California History 
 — and that one day, Sacramento will be ready to value it.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2026/06/11/18886737.php
SUMMARY:Why Juneteenth Still Isn’t a Holiday in the City of Sacramento
LOCATION:Sacramento City Hall 
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2026/06/11/18886737.php
DTSTART:20260616T200000Z
DTEND:20260616T210000Z
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