Freedom Day Holiday and Juneteenth Liberty Day as June 19 as a celebration or June Teenth commemorating the end of slavery as a Social justice concept or Emancipation and equal rights awareness. Credit: iStock / wildpixel

The cookout will be fire, but Juneteenth deserves more than just burgers.

June 19th is the oldest known celebration of the end of slavery in the United States, and Gen Z and millennials are reimagining what it means to honor that legacy in ways that are intentional and genuinely fun. 

Here’s how to celebrate Juneteenth like you actually mean it.

Host a freedom movie night: Skip the streaming algorithm and curate your own. Set up a projector outside, grab some blankets, and screen films that center Black stories — think “Selma,” “Judas and the Black Messiah,” or “The Harder They Fall.” Add a group discussion after. The conversation will surprise you.

Support Black-owned everything all day: Make June 19th a full 24-hour commitment to Black-owned businesses. Flowers from a Black florist. Dinner from a Black chef. It’s a celebration and an economic act at the same time.

Throw a Juneteenth art showcase: Rally your creative community — painters, poets, photographers, spoken word artists — and throw a pop-up showcase in someone’s backyard, a rented gallery space, or even a park. Black art is resistance, documentation, and celebration all at once.

Learn one new thing about your history: Juneteenth is the perfect moment to go deeper than what you learned in school. Pick up “The 1619 Project,” listen to a podcast episode of Sold in America, or explore the digital archives at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture. Knowledge is its own kind of celebration.

Create a freedom vision board: Gather your crew for an afternoon of intention-setting. What does freedom look like for you personally. Vision boards rooted in the spirit of Juneteenth hit differently when you connect your personal goals to a larger legacy of liberation.

Volunteer with a local organization: Freedom isn’t finished. Find a local organization working on voting rights, housing equity, or youth education and give a few hours of your time. Juneteenth is a reminder that the work continues, and so can you.

Juneteenth is a day to be present and to pour into the community and culture that has always poured into you.

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