African-American
Task Force Group
Sponsors Event
By BILL
JONES
Staff Writer
About 50 people
from throughout Northeast Tennessee took part in the second biennial "Oh Freedom Emancipation Day
Celebration" conference held on Saturday in the Christian Life Center of First Baptist Church.
The event was sponsored by the African-American Task Force Coalition of
East Tennessee.
The event had opened with a reception Friday evening,
then resumed at 8 a.m. Saturday with a "centennial breakfast."
Officials Welcome Group
During Saturday's 9 a.m. opening
ceremony, LeRoy Ripley, the event's co-chairman, was joined by Greeneville Mayor Darrell Bryan,
Greene County Mayor Alan Broyles, Greene County Sheriff Steve Burns and state Rep. David Hawk,
R-5th, of Greeneville. The officials welcomed those attending the
conference.
Hawk, who sponsored legislation last year that gave official
state recognition to August 8 as "Emancipation Day in Tennessee," told the audience that he was
happy to have done so.
August 8 was the day on which Andrew Johnson,
while serving as military governor of Tennessee during the Civil War, freed his personal slaves.
That day has long been celebrated by the African-American community here, as well as those in other
parts of Tennessee, as "Emancipation Day."
Hawk also told the audience
on Saturday morning that conversations have begun here recently about developing a local museum
dedicated to Emancipation Day and the "reconstruction period" that followed the Civil
War.
Eston Williams, coordinator of the Smoky Mountain RC&D Council
in Knoxville, master of ceremonies of the Saturday program, introduced Lisa Treece, of Morristown,
who presented a one-woman drama entitled "I'm Free."
The high-energy
drama, she explained, presented the perspective of a young African-American woman who had just
learned that she and other slaves had just been freed.
"Like my momma
said, if you ask God long enough and believe on him strong enough, he will hear your call," Treece's
character said.
The keynote address was presented by Pastor Sharon L.
Bowers, chaplain of Holston United Methodist Home for Children. Bowers also is the founder and chief
executive officer of Character Based Leadership, a leadership and personal development
firm.
Bowers told the audience that an important thing to remember is
that we are all "family," no matter what our race may be.
She told the
audience that little is known about when African-Americans first came to Greene County, "but there
have been people of color here for a very long time."
Pastor Bowers also
led the audience through an exercise in which she asked them to write down the names, ages and races
of the five people closest to them and of five friends.
If at least one
person on individuals' lists did not look significantly different from them, Bowers said, the list
makers should attempt to broaden their circle of friends.
Workshops
Presented
Conference attendees were invited to take part in a series
of workshops. The workshops, which began about 11 a.m., included those that dealt
with:
* the "Willie Lynch Papers," conducted by Pastor
Bowers;
* the "Underground Railroad" presented by National Park Service
Historian Barbara Tagger;
* "Recreating the Profile," presented by the
husband-wife team of Meichelle and Curtis Gibson;
* "A Guide to
Discovering the Past," presented by local genealogical researcher Randi Knott;
and
* "Race Relations: Exploring Our Baggage," led by Saadia Williams, of
Knoxville.
After a lunch prepared by Manna Catering, conference
participants were entertained by "Faith," a two-man praise performance group composed of Curtis
Anderson and Raymond Justice, of Friendship Baptist Church.
Conference
attendees were able to attend other workshop sessions during the afternoon as all five workshops
were repeated.
Roundtable Discussion
At about 2:15 p.m., a roundtable discussion featuring the leaders of the
workshops was held. Participating in the roundtable discussion were: Barbara Tagger, Meichelle and
Curtis Gibson, Sharon Bowers, Randi Knott and Saadia Williams.
During the
roundtable discussion, the workshop leaders were asked to address three
questions:
* "What are your thoughts on the following statement: America
has been and remains the center of one of man's greatest struggles for freedom and
equality?
* "How did today's culture of discrimination evolve from the
institutionalized policies of yesterday?
* "The cry for justice
concerning racism is not just an American problem, but a world problem. So how can people of color
today engage and organize a social protest movement now in the 21st century?"
'Emancipation Day'
Following discussion of those three
questions, the audience was invited to join a discussion of a fourth question: How can a celebratory
revival of the 8th of August Emancipation Day be initiated in Tennessee today, especially among our
younger generation?
Curtis Gibson said he thought incorporating more
modern music into the celebration would bring younger people to it. He suggested incorporating rap
and rhythm and blues music to attract younger participants.
Meichelle
Gibson suggested that since younger people love the Internet, using the Internet to communicate
information about Emancipation Day Celebration likely would be a good means of attracting a younger
audience.
She noted that statistics show that college students spend an
average of three and a half hours a day on the Internet.
Tagger said
including youth in the planning of Emancipation Day programs also would help involve youth and
attract a younger audience.
Bowers said efforts need to be made to
convince young people that Emancipation Day is "not just an "old people's" celebration. "It's a
celebration for all of us."