BUILD
  • Welcome
  • Home
  • Mentorship
  • BLOG
  • Newsletters, Videos & Photos
  • Resources
  • Events
  • Subcommittees
  • jobs
  • Fellow BRGs
  • Commission on African American Affairs (CAAA)
  • Welcome
  • Home
  • Mentorship
  • BLOG
  • Newsletters, Videos & Photos
  • Resources
  • Events
  • Subcommittees
  • jobs
  • Fellow BRGs
  • Commission on African American Affairs (CAAA)
Search
Events
More events from our blog

Next general meeting: 5/19, 9 to noon

5/12/2022

 
Picture
Blacks United In Leadership and Diversity invites you to our May General Membership Meeting! We welcome the Black community and our allies.​

Join us Thursday, May 19th, from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm for our May General Membership Meeting! Attached is the calendar appointment with zoom link,  and the agenda will be forthcoming.

Special Guest Speaker: Merritt Long 

Please share this information and encourage your colleagues, state-employed family, and friends to attend and get involved! We are a formal, enterprise-wide resource group conducting official state business. Participants are not required to take leave to participate. If you experience any challenges in participating, please let us know.

For more information about BUILD, visit our website BUILDwa.org

If you have any questions, concerns, or feedback, or if you need an accommodation to fully participate in our meetings or events, email us at [email protected].

​

build_general_membership_meetings_2022_-_calendar_hold.ics
File Size: 46 kb
File Type: ics
Download File

SAVE THE DATE, celebrate Juneteenth with BUILD, 6/16/22!

5/10/2022

 
Juneteenth is a state holiday!

BUILD's 6/16 event included:
Music, speeches, special guests, food, and more music!



Selected photos from the day...
More high-resolution photos

See a program of the event with a list of activities.
Picture

This event was at capacity and was LIVE STREAMED through TVW.
Yup, we streamed on Facebook too!

Watch the Juneteenth event promotional video!
Picture

Watch WDVA's presentation on the history of Juneteenth!

Just want the QR code to this event page for use in your agency's communications?
​Feel free to use the image below...
Picture

Check out this year's Juneteenth proclamation!
Picture
Download a copy!
juneteenth.pdf
File Size: 1018 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File


​Juneteenth Celebration and Reflection:
“Juneteenth has never been a celebration of victory or an acceptance of the way things are. It’s a celebration of progress. It’s an affirmation that despite the most painful parts of our history, change is possible—and there is still so much work to do.” 
— Barack Obama

Juneteenth, also known as Freedom Day, serves as a day to reflect on our journey to freedom for Black people in America.  As Washington State, along with the rest of the United States of America, seeks to celebrate Juneteenth as an official holiday, our community reflects on our history and the significance of Juneteenth in this country.  Many Americans are unaware that enslavement of our people did not once the Emancipation Proclamation was signed by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863. It ended two years later in 1865, when more than 2,000 troops arrived in Galveston Bay Texas to enforce the freedom that belonged to black people. The impact of delayed action from a promise that was given and not fulfilled for 2 years is an all too familiar feeling. 

Post-emancipation, known as Reconstruction was an era consistently references as a period great hope yet struggle, and uncertainty for Black people in America. As the reality of black people being free started to settle in, we saw racism and oppression show up in a new form. Even though black people were no longer enslaved, they were faced with issues of Black Codes and Jim Crow, known as strict laws on how to treat black people. They were put in place to deprive and strip the fundamental rights and economic growth for the Black community. In addition to the corrupt laws in place, Black people were victims of horrendous acts by white supremacy believers , whose sole purpose was to terrorize the newly freed Black people anybody or entity that supported them. 

America has made progress, where the Black people are concerned but we as whole still suffer from the evil that America was built upon. It is systemic and must be purged. 

Reflection 

Juneteenth is not just a moment in American history, where we only celebrate the freedom for black people. It serves as a reminder of resilience and the determination that black people continuously show. We’ve overcome, we’ve endured, we do not break. However, we deserve rest, comfort, and peace. This is a moment in history, that highlights the long journey we have traveled. A moment in history, where our community can revive their hope and strength to build a better future for not only ourselves, but those that come after. So, let us not just a celebrate on Juneteenth, let us be inspired to act and commit to the effort of establishing a world where equality and inclusion does exist. 

BUILD offers more graphics you can use to honor the occasion!
Picture
Picture
Picture

    ABOUT

    A collection of current and past events sponsored by BUILD.

    Find more events on our blog page.

    Archives

    January 2025
    May 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    February 2021
    October 2020
    August 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020

    Categories

    All
    2019
    2020
    Black History Month
    Event
    General Meeting
    Juneteenth
    Membership Mingles

    RSS Feed

  • Welcome
  • Home
  • Mentorship
  • BLOG
  • Newsletters, Videos & Photos
  • Resources
  • Events
  • Subcommittees
  • jobs
  • Fellow BRGs
  • Commission on African American Affairs (CAAA)