"We got there the next day," says Lee, who credits the late Rev. Ronald Myers -- with
whom she served as a board member of the National Juneteenth Observance Foundation
-- for impressing upon her Juneteenth's rightful place among national holidays. "During
the signing, I thought, ‘How wonderful that the whole world can celebrate Juneteenth.
That finally people can see it was freedom for everybody -- not just for the enslaved
or for Black people or for Texans. For everybody.' And then I thought, ‘We should
celebrate from June 19 to July 4.' Now that would be a celebration."
After a lifetime devoted to advocacy and the greater good, most people would consider
their to-do list complete. But most people aren't Opal Lee. There are still so many
issues to address, she says. Like education ("We can't let people remove books from
schools that tell our real history"); equity ("We've got to tackle joblessness and
homelessness and health care that some people can get, and others can't"); and climate
change ("I contend that if we don't get busy cleaning up our Earth, we're all going
to Hell in a handbasket").
But from years of experience, she can tell you the good news is this: We can do it
-- together.
"Most of us all want the same things: a decent place to live, a job that pays enough
for us to have food and a car and a house of our own, to be able to send our children
to college. Everybody wants this way of life," she says. "I hope that people will
realize that by working together against the disparities we have now, we can get so
much done -- and so much sooner."