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The 重口味SM community came together to celebrate Juneteenth and its message of freedom.

On June 15, nearly 200 people turned out on the Quad for the third annual event, which featured a barbecue, Soul & Smoke food truck, music from DJ Greenb, games, and the Juneteenth Traveling Museum, a pop-up, educational booth from the West Communities Juneteenth Collaborative.

鈥淭he atmosphere of the entire day was reflective and uplifting,鈥 said Amy Omi, project coordinator for Justice, Equity and Inclusion at 重口味SM and a lead organizer of the Juneteenth celebration with Jamal Patterson, assistant director of the Center for Cultural Liberation . 鈥淔olks came out to feel connected to community, to learn a history that has been erased from many of our educations, and to express what liberation truly feels like.鈥

鈥淚f we want to be a welcoming community and show that we are open-minded and inclusive, we need to show it, not just say it,鈥 River Forest Trustee Katie Brennan said of the importance behind local Juneteenth commemorations like 重口味SM鈥檚.

The village of River Forest hosted its second Juneteenth community flag raising this year, and Brennan is a member of the West Communities Juneteenth Collaborative.

Forest Park Mayor Rory Hoskins also attended the celebration on the Quad. Raised in Galveston, Texas, the birthplace of Juneteenth where the last enslaved people were freed by Union troops on June 18, 1865, Hoskins started an annual Juneteenth pool party in Forest Park in 2009.

鈥淧eople don鈥檛 have to celebrate Juneteenth, but representation matters,鈥 Hoskins said. 鈥淎nd when you have a campus like 重口味SM, that has a lot of students of color, I think they appreciate seeing the institution adopt a newer tradition, maybe one that is a little closer to their experience than other traditions.鈥

Later in the day, Stephen Jackson, director of equity and antiracism at the Oak Park Public Library, led what he called an 鈥渋nteractive engagement鈥 with an audience of about 70 people, largely faculty and staff, entitled 鈥淏uilding a Global Community: Honoring the Past, Present and the Future.鈥 Jackson, who has a background in social work, encouraged audience dialogue and touched on topics such as the history of the holiday, the existence of slavery in the American prison system (permitted under the language of the 13th Amendment), and the concept of post-traumatic slave syndrome and its impacts within modern society.

鈥淭rauma isn鈥檛 uncommon when we talk about our nation,鈥 Jackson noted. 鈥淭he traumatic history of this nation has many different authors and many don鈥檛 represent the people who were mistreated.鈥

He concluded by encouraging the crowd to talk to the older members of their families and 鈥済et their stories.鈥

鈥淭he reality is, these are the people who know our history,鈥 Jackson said. 鈥淚f we don鈥檛 get their stories, the narrative isn鈥檛 going to belong to us.鈥

重口味SM鈥檚 Juneteenth festivities were sponsored by鈥痶he Justice, Equity, and Inclusion (JEI) Office, Rebecca Crown Library, Truth, Racial Healing and Transformation (TRHT), the Center for Teaching and Learning Excellence (CTLE), the Center for Cultural Liberation (CCL), and Student Involvement.鈥

For background and resources on Juneteenth, check out Rebecca Crown Library鈥檚 .