Charleston, 
Jan 11: Congregants at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church 
cried out in testimony, prayer and song at a New Year's Eve service recalling 
the vigils held by blacks 150 years ago as they awaited President Abraham 
Lincoln's signing of the Emancipation Proclamation.
The document that 
helped end slavery in the United States resonated deeply in Charleston, where 
thousands of enslaved Africans arrived in America from the late 17th century to 
the early 19th century. The first shots of the Civil War also were fired in 
Charleston in 1861.
"It's not just an African-American celebration, it's 
an American celebration, akin to the Fourth of July," Reverend Clementa Pinckney 
said to 100 congregants at the two-hour service, known as Watch Night. "It's 
freedom come full circle."
As he read aloud excerpts from the 
proclamation, he told the congregation, "We stand on the shoulders of 
abolitionists and missionaries."
The lights inside the 194-year-old 
church were turned off shortly before midnight. In the dark, a succession of 
singers in a minute-by-minute countdown to the new year called, "Watchman, 
watchman, please tell me the hour of the night."
The minister's response 
pierced the darkness. "It is three minutes to midnight," then "It is two minutes 
to the new year," then "Last chance to pray in 2012." Finally, "It is now the 
new year. Freedom has come."
Watch Night, a historical New Year's Eve 
tradition of reflection and prayer in some American Protestant churches, became 
a tradition in African-American churches starting in 1862.
That night, on 
"Freedom's Eve," black churches and abolitionist communities waited for what 
19th-century abolitionist leader Frederick Douglass wrote was "the glorious 
morning of liberty about to dawn upon us."
The proclamation, which 
Lincoln issued on January 1, 1863, in the middle of the Civil War, formally 
declared free millions of slaves in rebellious states that had left the United 
States and were not occupied by federal troops. It also allowed black men who 
had been enslaved to join the Union Army and Navy.
Though slavery was not 
fully abolished until the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified 
in 1865, Watch Night was "a celebration of what freedom might mean," said Dawn 
Chitty, education director of the African American Civil War Museum in 
Washington, D.C., which focuses on the history and contributions of the United 
States Colored Troops.
"It wasn't just about being free to walk away from 
chains and shackles and forced labor, but about having a chance to fight for a 
country that didn't uphold any rights that you had at the time," she 
said.
Historians and scholars agree that slaves in the South were aware 
of the coming proclamation, which had been published months before it was 
signed.
"Groups of people gathered together with song, prayer, programs, 
whatever they could do, to recognize what was coming at midnight," Chitty 
said.
A few years later in 1868, Charleston blacks began holding an 
annual Emancipation Day parade, a tradition that they planned to repeat with 
floats, marching bands and community organizations taking part.
The 
parade was among a number of events being held across the country to mark the 
150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation. A three-day display of the 
fragile original document was due to end at the National Archives in 
Washington.
Ends
SA/EN
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Watch Night marks 150th anniversary of Lincoln's proclamation
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