News from the South - Tennessee News Feed
Black historians find ways to celebrate Juneteenth amid Tennessee crackdowns on DEI
by Angela Dennis, Tennessee Lookout
June 19, 2025
As cities across Tennessee prepare for Juneteenth celebrations with banners unfurling, vendors setting up, and leaders finalizing programs honoring Black liberation, a deeper question lingers: What does it mean to celebrate freedom in a state restricting how that freedom’s history is taught?
In Tennessee, state lawmakers have gutted DEI programs, banned books by Black authors, and restricted how teachers can talk about race and history in the classroom.
This year’s celebrations have also come with cutbacks. Across the country, Juneteenth events have been scaled back due to shrinking DEI funding, canceled federal grants and retreat from corporate support for racial justice initiatives.
For many Black educators, organizers, and students, the policies feel like a modern day echo of the delayed freedom Juneteenth was created to mark. It represents a continued struggle for true freedom and liberation.
Republican supermajority passes bills to “dismantle” DEI in state, local government
“The attacks on our history, on information, professors, universities and on teachers, are horrifying,” said Tennessee State Rep. Justin Pearson. “One of the first tools of oppression is to deny the education of people. In this moment in Tennessee and across the country, we are seeing policies and practices that are very harmful to our society’s memory about how we have gotten to where we are.”
On June 19, 1865, enslaved people in Galveston, Texas, learned they had been free for more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation. That delay in freedom highlights, for many, the same struggle seen today as laws and policies seek to suppress the teaching of Black history and limit the freedom of education.
What began as a regional celebration has grown into a national symbol of Black freedom, with Juneteenth becoming a federal holiday in 2021, signed into law by President Joe Biden. Gov. Bill Lee signed a law recognizing Juneteenth as a state holiday in 2023.
“Recognizing Juneteenth as a state holiday, while passing laws that harm Black communities, reveals deep hypocrisy,” said Pearson. “We’re still trapped by systems, academically, environmentally, politically, and civically, despite being technically free.”
For other community leaders, the recognition of Juneteenth as a federal holiday is significant but raises important questions about the intent and timing of such a move.
Chris Woodhull, a longtime civic leader in East Tennessee, reflected on how he and others were teaching the significance of Juneteenth decades ago, long before it gained national visibility.
“Back in the ’90s, I was teaching about Juneteenth with young people through our organization called Tribe One,” Woodhull said. “We were talking about emancipation and the legacy of slavery before it was popular.”
When Juneteenth was made a federal holiday in 2021, Woodhull couldn’t help but notice the timing after the 2020 murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer — and subsequent uprisings —and growing momentum behind the movement to defund the police.
“Juneteenth became a federal holiday not in a vacuum but in the wake of George Floyd’s death, when people were in the streets demanding justice, systemic change, and real transformation,” he said.
While he appreciates the symbolism of the recognition, Woodhull said it felt, in part, like a concession, a gesture meant to appease, rather than challenge systems of power. Still, Woodhull believes Juneteenth holds real significance, especially when it’s rooted in truth and history.
“There are a lot of well-meaning people who want to celebrate Juneteenth but don’t really understand what it means,” he said. “We can’t afford for it to become just another day off. The challenge is to make sure we’re not just marking the day but honoring the story, and the struggle behind it.”
In recent years, Tennessee lawmakers have passed sweeping legislation targeting the teaching of race, diversity and Black history. In 2021, the state passed a law banning divisive concepts in public education, followed by restrictions in 2022 on mandatory DEI training in higher education. These measures were followed by further legislation in 2025 aimed at dismantling DEI programs across the state.
Book bans and curriculum restrictions have also spread across Tennessee. In January 2022, McMinn County removed the Pulitzer-winning graphic novel Maus from its eighth-grade curriculum.
That same year, Hamilton County established a review board to evaluate books for “offensiveness,” leading to the removal of titles with Black and LGBTQ+ voices. In Knoxville, 113 books, including Push by Black author Sapphire, were pulled from schools. Wilson County removed nearly 400 books, including works by Toni Morrison, while Nashville’s public libraries responded by promoting banned books during Banned Books Week. In Chattanooga, The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas was also removed.
Despite political efforts to restrict classroom content, educators across Tennessee are finding ways to teach Juneteenth and center Black freedom.
“Juneteenth has always been a topic I discussed in my classes,” said Dr. Learotha Williams, associate professor of African American and Public History at Tennessee State University and director of the North Nashville Heritage Project. “It’s one of those celebrations that has persisted.”
Williams believes Black history must extend beyond traditional classrooms. His courses split time between lectures and community exploration, including visits to historic sites. At Hadley Park Community Center in Nashville, he also led a community course on Black Nashville, taking community members to former enslaved markets and lynching sites. He draws that inspiration from Carter G. Woodson — the author and historian known as the “Father of Black History” — who urged scholars to consider whether their work uplifts or alienates the communities they study.
“That was one of the most rewarding teaching experiences I’ve ever had,” he said. “It involved students and many elders in the community engaging directly with their city’s history.”
In Knoxville, Dr. Melody Hawkins, a nationally recognized and award-winning educator, sees Juneteenth as an opportunity for reflection and liberation in classrooms, despite growing restrictions on educators like herself
“Whenever people hear about all the banned books, there’s this assumption that it means we can’t still do the work,” she said. “But you can still be affirming. We just call it being good teachers.”
She believes the focus should be less about restricted terminology and more about how educators show up for their students.
“Juneteenth teaches us about our history and also helps us build classrooms where Black students feel safe, valued, and free to thrive,” she said.
Her upcoming book, Black Girl in the Middle, explores how race and gender bias shape education for Black girls, particularly in middle school. While educators didn’t create the systems that marginalize students, Hawkins says, “we’re still responsible for how we respond to them.”
In East Tennessee, Black in Appalachia, an educational organization, preserves and amplifies Black history and community stories in the region, especially in rural areas where much of the history is whitewashed. Director William Isom sees the current climate as part of a larger historical pattern of erasure.
“From my perspective, none of this is new. This repression is just a continuation of our history,” he said.
Isom points to Reconstruction as a parallel.
Juneteenth strengthens the whole idea of the American narrative and any effort to erase the difference in perspectives around this significant day.
– Adam Dickson, Langston Centre
“If local archives and historical societies looked closely at how their communities were shaped by Reconstruction, and its dismantling, they’d see the throughline.”
His advice is to focus on community record-keeping.
“Everyday people creating their own records, sharing their family stories, can be more powerful than anything an organization can do.”
Adam Dickson, Cultural Director of the Langston Centre in Johnson City, runs a monthly public series called Community History 365. He believes the burden of preserving and teaching Black history now rests heavily on local communities.
“Juneteenth strengthens the whole idea of the American narrative and any effort to erase the difference in perspectives around this significant day,” Dickson said.“For so long, the Black perspective around Juneteenth had been ignored. That’s why it’s such a pivotal moment and never really considered as it should have been so it was a pivotal moment.”
For Pearson, embracing Juneteenth is also about Black joy. He said it’s as essential as any political or educational fight.
“There’s a song that says, ‘This joy that I have, the world did not give it to me, and the world can’t take it away,’” he said. “We are still here, despite everything that has been done to diminish our humanity. That’s good news. And we have a responsibility to carry the spirit of those who came before us, both in our struggles and in our celebrations. Because they persevered, we can persevere. Because they sacrificed, we can serve. Because they gave, we can do more.”
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com.
The post Black historians find ways to celebrate Juneteenth amid Tennessee crackdowns on DEI appeared first on tennesseelookout.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Left-Leaning
This article expresses a clear ideological perspective that is critical of Tennessee’s Republican-led policies on education, diversity, and race. Through emotionally charged language, emphasis on the erosion of DEI efforts, and highlighting voices who frame such legislative actions as repressive and hypocritical, the article adopts a sympathetic tone toward those opposing these policies. While it includes factual reporting on laws passed and community responses, the narrative framing and choice of quotes from figures like Rep. Justin Pearson and educators critical of current policies indicate a left-leaning stance, especially in its defense of racial justice and historical education.
News from the South - Tennessee News Feed
Tennessee lawmakers respond to Trump’s push to eliminate mail-in ballots
SUMMARY: President Donald Trump is advocating to ban mail-in ballots and voting machines, claiming without evidence that mail-in voting leads to fraud. He urges Republicans to support a shift to paper ballots only, aiming to sign an executive order before the 2026 midterms. Tennessee Republicans, including Sen. Joey Hensley and Rep. Tim Rudd, back Trump, citing election security and strict absentee ballot rules requiring valid reasons. Conversely, Democrats like Rep. John Ray Clemmons argue the plan undermines democracy and voter rights, noting Tennessee’s low voter turnout results from restrictive laws. The U.S. Constitution allows states to set election rules, but Congress can intervene.
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The post Tennessee lawmakers respond to Trump's push to eliminate mail-in ballots appeared first on www.wkrn.com
News from the South - Tennessee News Feed
Tennessee National Guard to join D.C. police order
by Sam Stockard, Tennessee Lookout
August 19, 2025
Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee is dispatching National Guard troops to Washington, D.C., this week to join the president’s law enforcement takeover in the nation’s capital.
Acting on orders from President Donald Trump, the governor granted a request to help the District of Columbia National Guard with a “security mission,” spokesperson Elizabeth Johnson said.
Tennessee will join several other Republican-controlled states and send 160 Guard troops this week to D.C. “to assist as long as needed,” according to Johnson. They will work with local and federal law enforcement agencies on monument security, community safety patrols, federal facilities protection and traffic control, she said.
The Tennessee Guard deployment will be funded and regulated by the federal government.
At least four other Republican governors are sending nearly 1,000 National Guard troops to D.C. after Trump activated 800 D.C. soldiers.
Trump ordered the federal takeover of Washington, D.C., law enforcement despite opposition from local officials who said crime is down some 30%.
Following a legal challenge by D.C. officials, the Trump administration backed off appointing a federal official to head the department and agreed to leave the city’s police chief in command. U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi, though, told local police to work with federal officers on immigration enforcement even if city laws are conflicting.
Lee also said he would deploy National Guard troops to provide logistical help with Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers in Tennessee so they can spend more time on deportation.
Democratic state Rep. John Ray Clemmons of Nashville accused the governor of “uprooting” Guard personnel from their families to distract people from Trump’s “refusal to release the Epstein files,” a reference to the Jeffrey Epstein sex trafficking investigation and whether Trump is mentioned in the documents.
Clemmons pointed out violent crime in D.C. decreased by 26% this year while overall crime is down by 7%.
“If Trump was serious about addressing crime in D.C., all he and Congress have to do is better support and fund D.C. police, as they have the power to do, rather than militarize one of the most beautiful cities in America,” Clemmons said.
YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.
Tennessee Lookout is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Tennessee Lookout maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Holly McCall for questions: info@tennesseelookout.com.
The post Tennessee National Guard to join D.C. police order appeared first on tennesseelookout.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Left-Leaning
The content presents a critical view of Republican actions, particularly focusing on Tennessee Governor Bill Lee and former President Donald Trump’s deployment of the National Guard to Washington, D.C. It emphasizes opposition from Democratic officials and highlights concerns about militarization and distraction from other issues. The article’s framing and choice of quotes suggest a perspective that leans toward the left side of the political spectrum, critiquing conservative policies and leadership decisions.
News from the South - Tennessee News Feed
Survey shows Tennessee teachers’ feelings about cell phones, disciplinary measures and school culture
SUMMARY: A recent Tennessee Education Survey of nearly 40,000 teachers reveals most middle and high school teachers find cellphone use disruptive, with 73% reporting cheating via phones. While 94% say schools restrict phone use during class, half of high school teachers want a full campus ban. A new state law bans wireless devices during instruction but lets districts set specific rules. Teacher retention is driven mainly by school culture, despite only a third being satisfied with pay. Most teachers support current discipline methods and evaluations, with early-career teachers spending more time on discipline but generally satisfied with evaluations improving their teaching.
Read the full article
The post Survey shows Tennessee teachers’ feelings about cell phones, disciplinary measures and school culture appeared first on wpln.org
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