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Define inoted5/6/2023 Much of the collective consciousness of black people in mainland North America-the belief of individual men and women that their own fate was linked to that of the group-has long been articulated through a common history, indeed a particular history: centuries of enslavement, freedom in the course of the Civil War, a great promise made amid the political turmoil of Reconstruction and a great promise broken, followed by disfranchisement, segregation and, finally, the long struggle for equality. The conversation weighed upon me as I left the studio, and it has since. While they seemed impressed-but not surprised-that slaves had played a part in breaking their own chains, and were interested in the events that had brought Lincoln to his decision during the summer of 1862, they insisted it had nothing to do with them. Others may have been the children of immigrants. Two had been born in Haiti, one in Jamaica, one in Britain, two in Ghana, and one, I believe, in Somalia. Once I was drawn into their discussion, I was surprised to learn that no one in the group was descended from anyone who had been freed by the proclamation or any other Civil War measure. The controversy over what was sometimes called “self-emancipation” had generated great heat among historians, and it still had life.Īs I left the broadcast booth, a knot of black men and women-most of them technicians at the station-were talking about emancipation and its meaning. And I stated my long-held position that slaves played a critical role in securing their own freedom. I recalled the longstanding debate over the role of Abraham Lincoln, the Radicals in Congress, abolitionists in the North, the Union army in the field and slaves on the plantations of the South in the destruction of slavery and in the authorship of legal freedom. I addressed the familiar themes of the origins of that great document: the changing nature of the Civil War, the Union army’s growing dependence on black labor, the intensifying opposition to slavery in the North and the interplay of military necessity and abolitionist idealism. ![]() Some years ago, I was interviewed on public radio about the meaning of the Emancipation Proclamation.
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