Orange County NC Website
13 <br /> 1 There are more to events planned through to August 2020. The Human Relations Commission <br /> 2 will keep you informed as those event dates become available. <br /> 3 <br /> 4 Deborah Stroman read the proclamation: <br /> 5 <br /> 6 ORANGE COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS <br /> 7 400 Years Proclamation <br /> 8 <br /> 9 WHEREAS, in 1619 unfree Africans, "some 20. and odd Negroes," arrived in the English <br /> 10 settlement that would become Virginia; and <br /> 11 <br /> 12 WHEREAS, this historic arrival marked the beginning of the period in America where people of <br /> 13 Africa were forcibly taken from their homeland, transported to the American colonies and later <br /> 14 the United States, and committed to lifelong slavery and racial discrimination; and <br /> 15 <br /> 16 WHEREAS, after the Civil War, the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments to the <br /> 17 U.S. Constitution were ratified, ending slavery in the U.S. and granting the newly freed slaves <br /> 18 freedom, citizenship, the equal protection of law, and the right to vote; but despite these <br /> 19 Amendments, Blacks were quickly subjected to Jim Crow, a legally sanctioned institutionalized <br /> 20 system of racial segregation and subordination, as well as white resistance and violence; and <br /> 21 <br /> 22 WHEREAS, despite efforts such as the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s, anti-racism <br /> 23 advocacy, progressive legislation, and the election of President Barack Obama, Blacks continue <br /> 24 to face oppression and inequities across systems and institutions; and <br /> 25 <br /> 26 WHEREAS, Orange County is home to Black citizens who are descendants of Africans who <br /> 27 were kidnapped and enslaved 400 years ago; and <br /> 28 <br /> 29 WHEREAS, Blacks are diverse, respected residents who have worked to transcend the <br /> 30 continuing impacts of slavery and racial segregation and contribute to our community's <br /> 31 economic, political, social, and spiritual well-being; and <br /> 32 <br /> 33 WHEREAS, Blacks, whose experiences, generational wisdom, and work to triumph over racial <br /> 34 oppression, connect us to the past and help us meet the challenges of the future; and <br /> 35 <br /> 36 WHEREAS, our community must strive to understand and address the history and legacy of <br /> 37 racism, its impacts, and the evolving challenges and needs of all its residents as a result of <br /> 38 those impacts, and <br /> 39 WHEREAS, today, and every day, let us remember the harrowing experience of the Africans <br /> 40 who first came to the shores of English North America and the plight and burden of their <br /> 41 descendants; <br /> 42 <br /> 43 NOW, THEREFORE, we, the Orange County Board of Commissioners, do hereby proclaim <br /> 44 August 1, 2019 through July 31, 2020 as a year of remembrance to commemorate the 400th <br /> 45 anniversary of unfree Africans first arriving in English North America by working towards racial <br /> 46 healing and justice through revisiting the past and learning about efforts to win freedom and <br /> 47 equality, and encourage the Orange County Human Relations Commission to, over this <br /> 48 anniversary year and beyond, to: <br /> 49 • plan programs to acknowledge the impact that slavery and laws that enforced racial <br /> 50 discrimination and inequity had on the United States; and <br />