Friday, 17 June 2016

Dates Matter: World Sickle Cell Day, June 19 and Juneteenth





I don’t know how the United Nations came to decide that June 19 should be World Sickle Cell Day; the ways of international organizations are mysterious. But it was a good decision.  One suspects that America must have had a hand in the choice of the date, since sickle cell continues to be a significant public health problem in that country.
Dates matter. We can be sure that had it not been for an event that occurred on a certain date in America’s history, sickle cell disease would not have become the burden there that it is today. The event that I am thinking about took place in August 1619 and possibly marked the beginning of an infamous trade that lasted two centuries. The event was believed to be the first ever landing of Africans on North American soil at a small place in Virginia to which disgruntled Englishmen had fled away from the religious intolerance that blighted their native land. In the event, after the wasting of ten, or may be, twenty million black lives and the passage of two centuries, the worst ever example of human trafficking came to an end. Sort of. But it took a civil war for the institution of slavery itself to end in the American republic. Again, sort of. It is an irony impossible to ignore because that republic had been founded ostensibly in response to what the descendants of those refugees escaping religious persecution deemed tyranny, rooted in the actions of a mentally unstable monarch in far-off England. As it happens, that war is still being waged today, to the extent that, many in the republic feel bound to own assault weapons as their own personal guarantee against oppression.
Dates matter. The American civil war had been fought over the southern states’ refusal to abandon slavery, and it was not until May 1865, when the pro-slavery gang had been utterly defeated, that their resistance to the notion that all men are created equal was broken.  And on June 19, 1865, Major-General Gordon Granger, commander of  the military District of Texas at Galveston, TX, issued  his General Orders, Number 3  that declared, The people of Texas are informed that, in accordance with a proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free and that… this involves an absolute equality of personal rights and rights of property between former masters and slaves, and the connection heretofore existing between them becomes that between employer and hired labour. Yes. There was, naturally, jubilation among those who believed that they had been made free by the order, and the day, nicknamed “Juneteenth”, (“June” plus “teenth”) became a holiday.
 Dates matter. You see where I’m going?  June 19th is a significant date in the history of blacks in America, marking emancipation from the burden of slavery. So, perhaps it is not a coincidence that Juneteenth, the 19th of June, has become the day of observance for sickle cell disease and the date to note the work that remains to be done to emancipate, worldwide, the 30 million suffering under the public and personal burden that is sickle cell disease. So, we must mark this day in 2016 in whatever way we can, but, best of all, by donating towards the struggle. If you want to donate, go to the website of The Sierra Leone Sickle Cell Disease Society at www.sleonesickle.org. and follow the links. This could very well the most important thing you do for the rest of the year.

Tell Fren Tru

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