When Samantha Neyland was crowned Miss Hawaii USA 2020, she saw a unique opportunity to bring people of diverse backgrounds together and do something special for Hawaii.
Neyland brought attention to the Legislature that Hawaii was one of only three states that didn’t yet have an official recognition of Juneteenth — June 19 — the day that commemorates the historic end of slavery in the United States.
“I wanted to do something about it,” Neyland said in a telephone interview last week.
Hawaii, which has struggled over the years to overcome its complicated history of annexation and plantations, has many ethnic and economic divisions to this day that draw parallels to the plight of African Americans who have been held back by structural or institutional violence.
As a point in case, a report recently released by the Honolulu Police Department showed that even Honolulu had a noticeable difference in the way police used force against Pacific Islanders, Native Hawaiians, and African Americans.
That these three local vulnerable populations are experiencing more stringent treatment from law enforcement in a place like Hawaii highlights the need to ameliorate race relations and change the way we perceive one another.
Recognizing Juneteenth in Hawaii would be one way to bring attention, particularly in public education, to the historical pattern of racial inequality in America, and might be a way to raise keiki who are aware of systemic issues and willing to fix them.
At the Legislature, there are currently four measures that seek to recognize Juneteenth in Hawaii.
Senate Bill 16, Relating to State Holidays, introduced by Sen. Stanley Chang, would give local workers another day off to consider the importance of Juneteenth.
Senate Bill 316, introduced by Sen. Brian Taniguchi, Senate Bill 939, by Sen. Glenn Wakai, and House Bill 1308, by House Vice Speaker John Mizuno, all recognize and commemorate Juneteenth, but do not designate it as a state holiday.

Samantha Neyland, who was Miss Hawaii USA 2020, brought attention to the Legislature that Hawaii is one of only three states that don’t officially recognize Juneteenth.
Courtesy: Lisa G. Artistry
Neyland believes that giving people a symbolic day to reflect on and to study about the past would be a win for Hawaii, because all people, not just African Americans, can understand that freedom is what empowers everyone to accomplish great things.
Mizuno, who authored and introduced the House version in collaboration with Neyland, said that these types of moral “wins” are all the more important when the country is recovering from such a divisive and agonizing experience in the previous election year.
Mizuno said that domestic unrest and economic frustration are things that the Legislature needs to be sensitive to, and giving people a day that represents release from oppression and historic attention to injustice would be useful, even in Hawaii.
“As we celebrate Black History Month, it’s important to remember that disparities have significant impacts on an entire society,” Mizuno said in a telephone interview.
“Celebrating Juneteenth is as much about Black Lives Matter as it is about bringing attention to the disparities between our vulnerable populations that make them more at-risk during the COVID-19 pandemic,” he added.
Mizuno, who represents Kalihi Valley, is also acutely aware of the historical link that Filipinos and African Americans have shared. For much of America’s history, both population groups were often relegated to menial positions in government and private sector occupations.
Only in the last 50 years have Filipinos and African Americans been able to start to assume more senior or meaningful positions of influence. “The civil rights movement broke the barriers and paved the way for all the other groups,” Mizuno said.
I mentioned to Neyland this pattern, and how some of the country’s most exceptional people have fought with all their human might for just the right to be considered human among their peers.
“It’s important to remember that disparities have significant impacts on an entire society.” — House Vice Speaker John Mizuno
When I think of the struggles for respect in America, I think of individuals like Benjamin O. Davis Jr., a Black officer who was appointed to West Point by the only Black member of Congress at the time, Rep. Oscar De Priest. While at the U.S. Military Academy, Davis was intentionally ignored during his four years and no one spoke a word to him at all.
In spite of this prejudice, Davis later became a WWII fighter pilot and a lieutenant general in the Air Force, and is one of many “all-stars” of African American history for his talent and determination.
What has always bothered me is that the individuals we commemorate are often people who succeeded because they were the absolute best-of-the-best. The people whom we don’t hear about are the millions of other hard-working, ordinary individuals who never made it because they faced discrimination and were forced out. These people, if given a fair chance, probably would have become great in their fields.
“That’s a good point,” Neyland told me in response. “And I have always believed that true freedom is the freedom to fail and still be respected as a person. And that’s what all this is about. Freedom to be a person; freedom to know that with all your imperfections and all your achievements, you are still always someone worthy of respect.”
Now those are words of wisdom we all need to hear in 2021.
Neyland’s hope to make Juneteenth a recognition of these fundamental truths would be a great credit to both Hawaii and our aloha traditions, should these measures pass. Contact your representatives and senators and tell them you’d like to have a hearing scheduled for these bills.
Together, we can learn from the past and build a better future.
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