King Boston names Dr. April Khadijah Inniss as Director of Community Engaged Research
King Boston is pleased to announce that April Khadijah Inniss, MD, MSc has joined the team as the Director of Community Engaged Research.
King Boston is pleased to announce that April Khadijah Inniss, MD, MSc has joined the team as the Director of Community Engaged Research.
Juneteenth can belatedly serve as that Second Emancipation Proclamation, holding within it the possibility of a post-pandemic start to a future free from the bonds of racism.
Forty-six years ago, Carson Beach became a symbol of racial segregation in Boston, engulfed in a race riot. Saturday, celebrants rasied the Juneteenth flag there to honor the newly established federal holiday
It seems almost inconceivable in today’s information environment, but news of Lincoln’s original Emancipation Proclamation took nearly three years to reach all the enslaved people across the South.
There are several events in eastern Massachusetts marking the new federal holiday Juneteenth, which is officially celebrated on June 19.
About 200 people joined Governor Charlie Baker and Acting Mayor Kim Janey in Roxbury’s Nubian Square Friday evening for One Night in Boston, a festive event that kicked off a weekend of Juneteenth festivities
It was a celebration of Black music and culture in the heart of Roxbury.
Boston launched the All-Inclusive campaign this past April. Creatives, businesspeople and activists conceived this initiative to dismantle a perception of the city as unwelcoming and, in some instances, racist.
Juneteenth is known as the day when the last of the enslaved African Americans were told they were free in Texas — two years after the Emancipation Proclamation was issued.
Holidays, memorials, and symbols have always been part of American history and heritage, and in this time of racial reckoning we have an opportunity to add a new one — Juneteenth, America’s Independence Day — the day slavery came to an end.