Pictured Above: A photo Dan took of Former First Lady Michelle Obama’s presidential portrait by Amy Sherald at the Smithsonian Institution
“Even though the story has never been tidy, and Black folks have had to march and fight for every inch of our freedom, our story is nonetheless one of progress,” said Michelle Obama.
Today, we celebrate Juneteenth—the day in 1865 when the last enslaved Black Americans in Galveston, Texas learned they were free, more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation had been signed. It is a day of remembrance, resilience, and unfinished work. A reminder that freedom delayed is freedom denied—and that liberation is something each generation is called to carry forward.
As we reflect today, we're invited to ask a deeper question:
What does it truly mean to be free?
Perhaps freedom isn't only what we're liberated from.
Perhaps it's also what we're free to become.
To breathe deeply.
To drink clean water.
To take root.
To belong unapologetically.
To know that the place we call home has everything needed to sustain life—not only for ourselves, but for the countless beings with whom we share it.
Our lives are shaped by what's in the air.
By the water flowing through, around and beneath.
By the health of our soil and its smallest helpers.
By the canopies of our trees and all they shelter.
By the pollinators, fungi, oceans, rivers, and relationships—both human and more-than-human—that quietly make life possible every single day.
Liberation lives not only in our laws, but in our landscapes.
It lives in neighborhoods where children can safely play outside.
In rivers that run clean.
In forests of emerald green.
In communities resilient enough to weather storms together.
In the places we call home.
Because we have never existed apart from the living world.
When communities are burdened by pollution, chronic disinvestment or climate disasters, ecosystems suffer alongside them.
When forests disappear, waters are contaminated, species vanish, or soils are exhausted, people suffer too.
Our futures have always been intertwined.
Environmental justice reminds us that caring for people and caring for the Earth are not separate acts.
They are one and the same.
At Hammond Climate Solutions Foundation, we believe thriving is never the result of just one thing.
Healthy communities are built when clean energy, healthy ecosystems, affordable homes, public health, youth leadership, reliable transportation and strong relationships are woven together.
Because liberation is not simply the absence of injustice.
It is the presence of the conditions that allow life—in all its forms—to flourish.
This Juneteenth, may we honor those who fought for freedom by continuing to build a future where every person, every community, and every living being has the opportunity not only to survive, but to flourish and thrive.
Together. Ashe.

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