By Morgan Carpenterย
mcarpenter@afro.com
and
Brianna Robinsonย ย
brobinson@afro.comย
AFRO Interns
June 19 marked 161 years since the last enslaved people in Galveston, Texas were told of their freedom following the Civil War. Each year, the day is a time to celebrate Black freedom and reflect on the progress made and still needed. This year, the AFRO took the streets and interviewed men and women on the street, asking if they, as Black people, feel like they are truly free.
Have a look below at some voices from the Black community on the topic of freedom.
Ally Yededji, 20
Richmond, Va.
Public Policy Student
University of Pittsburgh

Do you feel we are finally free?: โI donโt think the answer is a simple โyesโ or โno.โ We have more opportunities today than previous generations did, but a lot of those opportunities came from being granted access to spaces, rights and institutions that we were once excluded from. Even today, that access can be limited, challenged or unequal. So, while I think Black people are far freer than we once were, I think itโs worth asking whether being granted access is the same thing as being truly free.โ
Nichelle Thomas, 60
Flint, Mich.
US Navy

Do you feel we are finally free?: โNo, absolutely not by far, look at it. Society is still under the thumb of people other than us of color and so we still donโt have a say so no matter what.โ
Alex Levy, 26
Baltimore, Md.
Cloud Security Engineer

Do you feel we are finally free?: โI think in the literal sense, probably. I think weโre bound by stereotypes. Thereโs a lot of negativity towards us and because of those stereotypes weโre not fully free.โ
Karsten Hardy, 44
Greenwood, Miss.
Microsoft Cloud Architect

Do you feel we are finally free?: โYes and no. Yesโ you know weโre free from religion and all these beautiful other things in the Constitution, โWe the people, in order to form a perfect unionโฆโ blah blah blahโฆyes, we are to a certain extentโฆweโre free, but thereโs things to improve. There are many different ways to go. We’re socially free, but not systematically free.โ
Imara Caston, 19
Atlanta, Ga.
Public Relations Student
Florida A&M University

Do you feel we are finally free?: โNo, I don’t think we are free. I think true freedom would mean we could do whatever we wanted, within legal guidelines of course, without consequences. So, in a lot of ways, we are still in constraints. There’s nothing free about having to fight against a system that was built by you, not for you. I just think that some peopleโs versions of โfreeโ are different, and in my version โ no โ we arenโt free.โ
Natalie McDuffie, 23
Howard County, Md.
Clinical Laboratory Scientist

Do you feel we are finally free?: โI would not say so. I think we live in a white America and because of that we will never be free. We live in a different world than white people and we will never be in the same reality, and thereโs things put in place to stop it.โ

