By Keira Williams, Senior Implementation Manager, DailyPay
Every June 19th, we pause to remember a freedom that arrived profoundly late. Juneteenth marks the day in 1865 when the last enslaved Black Americans in Galveston, Texas, finally received the news of their freedom, more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation was signed. Despite its immense significance, I didn’t learn about Juneteenth in school, discovering its truth only as an adult. This day is a powerful celebration of resilience, survival, and Black joy, but it’s also a vital moment for reflection and education.
As I deepened my understanding of this delayed freedom and the fierce resilience it embodies, I couldn’t help but think of my younger self – the little girl who didn’t yet grasp what race truly meant or how the world would come to define it. Part of me wished I could reach back through time to share the truths and strength she’d need to navigate a world that would inevitably treat her differently. This year, the urge became a mission: I decided to write her a letter.
Dear Little Me,
You don’t know it yet, but the world will treat you differently. Not because of who you are, but because of what you look like.
Right now, your biggest worry is what color hair beads to wear or whether your jump rope touches the ground. You don’t know what Juneteenth is. You don’t know what segregation was and how it impacted your ancestors. You don’t know that your Blackness, so bright and so beautiful, will one day be questioned, challenged, and politicized.
But one day, you’ll ask yourself: Why didn’t anyone tell me the whole story?
In time, you’ll learn Juneteenth is part of that story. June 19, 1865, marks the day when word spread that our ancestors were free. Can you imagine learning two years later that you are no longer enslaved? Let this be a reminder that progress doesn’t always arrive when it should. You’ll learn that freedom isn’t just about laws or dates. It’s about dignity, safety, opportunity, and most importantly, having a voice. And you’ll learn that you have to fight for all of that.
Here’s the part that might surprise you: Despite the challenges you’ll face, you will still rise. We all will rise. From that long-awaited day in 1865 to now, Black Americans have created, built, led, and transformed this country in ways that history books still struggle to keep up with.
We became inventors, scholars, artists, activists, world leaders, and architects of culture. We didn’t just survive injustice; we redefined what freedom could look like. You will learn about Katherine Johnson, who helped send astronauts to the moon; about Shirley Chisholm, the first black woman elected to Congress; and about everyday Black families who turn struggle into legacy. And one day, little girl, you’ll look in the mirror and realize: You are part of that legacy, too.
So, as you grow up, here’s what I need you to remember: You come from a people who have always turned delayed freedom into determination. Those who take pain and turn it into poetry, rhythm, resistance, and joy.
Juneteenth isn’t just about what was. It’s about what still can be when we honor truth, protect each other, and keep building a world where freedom is real for everyone. While the road ahead won’t always be fair, you won’t be walking it alone. You’ll be part of a legacy that reaches back generations and will fortify the ones to come.
Hold your head high. Ask the hard questions. Speak with your full voice. And never forget — you are the dream of someone who never got the chance to write this letter.
With love,
Me
I still carry that little girl with me today. She’s older, wiser, and knows the truth about freedom: that it must be protected, nurtured, and expanded every day.
When I celebrate Juneteenth now, I do so with both joy and resolve. Joy, for how far we’ve come. Resolve, for the work still ahead. Because freedom delayed is not freedom denied, but it is freedom unfinished.
So I honor the past by moving forward with purpose: lifting as I climb, making room for voices once silenced, and holding space for both truth and hope.
