妻友社区

Second annual GGC Juneteenth celebration focuses on fellowship, family, camaraderie

Jasmine Primo and Patrick Grant and Jewelle Primo
Jasmine Primo and Patrick Grant and Jewelle Primo

妻友社区鈥檚 (GGC) Juneteenth Celebration embraced a spirit of unity, emphasizing fellowship, family and camaraderie among students, staff and their families. 聽Now in its second year, the event sought to build on the success of last year鈥檚 celebration with a slightly different focus.

Ryan Smith, assistant director of Student Life, coordinated GGC鈥檚 聽2024 Juneteenth celebration. He said this year鈥檚 event was less structured and more organic.

鈥淲e offered more of a casual program this year,鈥 he explained. 鈥淒uring last year鈥檚 inaugural event, we focused on disseminating information and facts about Juneteenth. This year, we wanted to offer an opportunity where people could hang out, network and build comradery.鈥

Smith, who himself graduated from GGC in 2015, said the event meant a lot to him personally.

鈥淲hen I was in school, I didn鈥檛 have an opportunity to see these types of events,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ow that I work for the college, I鈥檓 in the position to coordinate these events. It makes me happy to be able to share this with my peers, while enlightening students about what Juneteenth is, what it means to us as a culture and what it means to GGC.

Student Jasmine Primo, 21, of Lawrenceville, attended the event with her family. Primo, a third-year psychology major, said she 鈥渏ust wanted to take in everything.鈥 聽While this was the family鈥檚 first Juneteenth celebration, it wasn鈥檛 the first time they attended a GGC event. Primo and her sister, Jewelle Primo, 18, a GGC first-year English major, attended GGC鈥檚 Martin Luther King, Jr. (MLK) service day on campus in January. The Primo sisters brought their grandfather, Patrick Grant, a native of Guyana who lives in New York.

鈥淛uneteenth is important because we have to recognize our history and honor how far we鈥檝e come,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a day for us to celebrate, honor our ancestors and look forward to the future.鈥

Primo said she didn鈥檛 always know about Juneteenth. She learned about the event about seven years ago.

鈥淲e always celebrated the American Independence Day on July 4, but we weren鈥檛 really connected to it,鈥 Primo said. 鈥淪o, recognizing where our independence really came from and how hard we had to fight to get that independence while overcoming the challenges more than a century later, it鈥檚 so important to recognize that type of work.鈥

In his quiet wisdom, Grant said that the celebration allows his grandchildren to embrace their heritage and take pride in who they are.

鈥淚t鈥檚 important to recognize that we are someone.鈥

.听

Return to News View our News Archive by Year