To read an original poem entitled Watch Night, click here.
WATCH NIGHT
If you live or grew up in a Black community in the United States, you have probably heard of "Watch Night Services,"
the gathering of the faithful in church on New Year's Eve. The service usually begins anywhere from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m.
and ends at midnight with the entrance of the New Year. Some folks come to church first, before going to out to celebrate.
For
others,
church is the only New Year's Eve event.
Like many others, I always assumed that Watch Night was a fairly standard Christian
religious service -- made a bit more Afrocentric because that's what
happens when elements of Christianity become linked with the Black Church.
And yes, there is a history of Watch Night in the Methodist tradition. Still, it seemed that most predominately White Christian churches did not
include Watch Night services on their calendars, but focused instead on Christmas
Eve programs. In fact, there were instances where clergy in Mainline denominations
wondered aloud about the propriety of linking religious services with a secular
holiday like New Year's Eve.
However, in doing some research, I discovered there are two essential reasons for the importance of New Year's Eve services in African American
congregations. Many of the Watch Night Services in Black communities that we
celebrate today can be traced back to gatherings on December 31, 1862, also known as
"Freedom's Eve." On that night, Americans of African descent came together in churches,
gathering places and private homes throughout the nation, anxiously awaiting news that
the Emancipation Proclamation had become law. Then, at the stroke
of midnight, it was
January 1, 1863, and according to Lincoln's promise, all slaves in the Confederate States were
legally
free. People remained in churches and other gathering places, eagerly
awaiting word that Emancipation had been declared. When the actual news of freedom was received later that day, there were prayers, shouts and
songs of joy as
people fell to their knees and thanked God.
But even before 1962 and the possibility of a
Presidential Emancipation, African people had gathered on New Year's Eve on
plantations across the South. That is because many owners of enslaved
Africans tallied up their business accounts on the first day of each new year.
Human property was sold along with land and furnishings to satisfy debts.
Families and friends were separated.
Often they never saw each other again in this earthly world. Thus coming together on
December 31 might be the last time for enslaved and free Africans to
be together with loved ones.
So, Black folks in North America have gathered annually on New Year's Eve
since the earliest days, praising God for bringing us
safely through another year and praying for the future. Certainly,
those traditional gatherings were made even more
poignant by the events of 1863 which brought freedom to the slaves and the Year
of Jubilee. Many generations have passed since and most of us were never taught the African American history of Watch Night.
Yet our traditions and our faith still bring us together at
the end of every year to celebrate
once again "how we got over."
Written by Charyn D. Sutton
© 2004
charynsutton@aol.com
Please contact Charyn Sutton at The Onyx Group if you are interested in a
presentation on the history of Watch Night at your school or conference.
This essay can be reproduced and used with proper attribution to and permission
from Charyn D. Sutton.

I llustration Citation:
Heard and Moseley.
Waiting for the hour [Emancipation]
December 31, 1862.
Carte de visite.
Washington, 1863.
Prints
and Photographs Division
African American
Odyssey: A Quest for Full Citizenship
The Civil War: Part 2
Library of Congress
Essay on Watch Night by Charyn D. Sutton,
The Onyx Group
Originally Written
December 2000, Revised August 2004 Additional information on the history of Watch Night can be found in Emancipation
Proclamation by noted African American historian John Hope Franklin and Forever
Free by Dorothy Sterling (out of print).
Click
here to read a sampling of people's comments.
The Onyx Group
P.O. Box 60
Bala Cynwyd,
PA 19004
Tel:
215-848-8860
Fax:
775-659-0771
E-mail:
charynsutton@aol.com
URL: www.onyx-group.com

|