By Dr. Matisa Wilbon, Moynihan Institute for Fatherhood Research and Policy
Juneteenth invites us to remember that freedom was never simply announced; it had to be claimed, protected, practiced, and passed forward. For Black families, that work continues in homes, schools, neighborhoods, churches, barbershops, playgrounds, and dinner tables across the country. At the center of that work are Black fathers.
Black fathers are freedom builders. They are freedom builders not only because they provide, but because they protect identity, create emotional safety, open doors of opportunity, and help heal generations. Their presence is more than meaningful; it is protective.
As we celebrate Juneteenth, we are reminded that freedom is not only a historical event. It is a daily practice. It is found in the ways families love, teach, guide, correct, affirm, and prepare children for the world. Black fathers have always been part of that freedom work. In the face of harmful stereotypes, social barriers, and systems that have too often tried to separate Black families or diminish Black fatherhood, research suggests that Black fathers continue to show up as protectors, nurturers, teachers, advocates, and builders of legacy.
Black Fathers Protect Identity
One of the most powerful ways Black fathers build freedom is by helping children know who they are.
A father’s voice can help shape a child’s understanding of their name, their history, their culture, and their worth. Around Juneteenth, that role becomes especially important. Juneteenth gives fathers an opportunity to teach children that their story did not begin with struggle alone. It is also a story of strength, faith, resistance, creativity, joy, and survival.
Black fathers protect identity by helping children see themselves through a lens of dignity rather than deficit. In a world that too often misnames or misunderstands Black children, a father’s affirmation can become a shield.
When a Black father tells his child, “You come from people who led, loved, and overcame,” he is doing more than teaching history. He is building confidence. He is giving that child a foundation. He is helping them stand in a world that may not always recognize their full humanity.
That is freedom work.
Black Fathers Create Emotional Safety
Fatherhood is a protective factor because it surrounds children with presence, guidance, affirmation, and accountability. Protection is not only physical. It is also emotional.
Children need to know they are safe to ask questions, safe to make mistakes, safe to feel, safe to grow, and safe to be loved even when life is difficult. Black fathers help create that safety through consistency, patience, listening, encouragement, and care.
A father’s presence can become a child’s first experience of safety. When Black fathers listen, and remain emotionally available, they help children develop confidence, emotional strength, and resilience.
This kind of fatherhood matters deeply. A child who feels seen and valued at home is better prepared to face the pressures outside of it. A child who hears words of affirmation from their father is better equipped to reject messages that question their worth. A child who experiences steady love learns that they are not alone.
In this way, Black fatherhood becomes a buffer. It helps protect children against the emotional weight of racism, instability, fear, and social messages that attempt to limit their sense of possibility.
Black Fathers Build Opportunity
Freedom also means access to opportunity. Black fathers help build that opportunity in many ways.
Sometimes it looks like helping with homework, attending school meetings, coaching a team, teaching financial responsibility, encouraging a dream, or making sure a child knows how to advocate for themselves. Sometimes it looks like introducing children to new places and possibilities. Sometimes it looks like discipline rooted in love and expectations rooted in belief.
Opportunity is not only created through money. It is also created through a father’s belief in his child’s future.
When a father says, “You can do this,” “I expect your best,” “I am proud of you,” or “Let me show you how,” he is opening a door. He is helping his child imagine a future beyond limitation. He is making freedom practical.
For many Black families, this kind of fatherhood is an act of resistance. It pushes back against every system, statistic, or stereotype that attempts to define Black children by risk instead of promise.
Black fathers help children see that their future is not already written by the world around them. They have agency. They have gifts. They have choices. They have a legacy to continue and a path to create.
Black Fathers Heal Generations
Juneteenth is about freedom delayed, but also freedom claimed. It reminds us that the impact of injustice can travel through generations, but so can healing.
Black fathers contribute to generational healing when they choose presence over absence, communication over silence, and connection over distance. Every act of engaged fatherhood is a form of generational repair.
For some fathers, this means giving their children what they did not always receive. For others, it means continuing the love, wisdom, and strength they inherited from fathers, grandfathers, uncles, mentors, and community elders. In both cases, Black fathers are shaping what gets passed down.
They are helping children inherit more than pain. They are passing down things that make families universal: love, discipline, faith, humor, emotional honesty, cultural pride, and family stories. They are showing their children that healing is possible and that manhood can include tenderness, accountability, affection, and growth.
This is one of the quiet but powerful ways Black fathers build freedom. They help families move from survival to wholeness.
Black Fathers Stabilize Communities
The protective role of Black fatherhood does not stop at the front door. When Black fathers are supported, families are strengthened. When families are strengthened, communities are stabilized.
Black fathers serve as so many things. They are coaches, mentors, neighbors, faith leaders, volunteers, advocates, and role models. Their influence often extends beyond their own children to nieces, nephews, students, young men on the block, and children in the community who are watching how they move through the world.
Fatherhood protects by creating belonging. It tells a child: you are seen, you are valued, you are covered, and you are not alone.
That sense of belonging can change a child’s life. It can also change the life of a community.
This is why conversations about fatherhood must not focus only on individual responsibility. They must also focus on support. Black fathers deserve systems, programs, policies, and communities that recognize their value and remove barriers to their full engagement. Supporting Black fathers is not charity. It is an investment in children, families, neighborhoods, and future generations.
Juneteenth and the Ongoing Work of Freedom
Juneteenth reminds us that freedom must be protected after it is proclaimed. The news of emancipation reached enslaved people in Galveston, Texas, on June 19, 1865, but the struggle for full freedom did not end there. In many ways, Black families have continued the work of defining, defending, and expanding freedom ever since.
Black fathers are part of that ongoing work.
They build freedom when they hold their children close. They build freedom when they teach the truth about history. They build freedom when they model responsibility and love. They build freedom when they protect their children’s dreams. They build freedom when they help their families heal. They build freedom when they show up, even in a world that has not always honored their presence.
This Juneteenth, we honor freedom by honoring the fathers who help build it every day.
Black fathers are protecting more than households; they are protecting dreams, identity, confidence, and legacy. They are helping children know their history without being bound by pain, understand their worth without apology, and imagine futures rooted in strength.
To celebrate Juneteenth is to celebrate liberation. It is also to recognize Black fathers as essential freedom builders in the ongoing story of Black family life.















