Children's Museum Slammed for Offering 'Juneteenth Watermelon Salad'

The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis has apologized over the cafeteria menu item, after patrons and social media users expressed their criticism.

Children's Museum of Indianapolis, in Indianapolis, Indiana
Image via Getty/Raymond Boyd/Michael Ochs Archives
Children's Museum of Indianapolis, in Indianapolis, Indiana

An Indiana museum has apologized for selling a watermelon menu item in honor of Juneteenth.

As pointed out by TMZ, the Children’s Museum of Indianapolis faced widespread criticism this week after someone posted a photo of its “Juneteenth Watermelon Salad” offered in its cafeteria. Social media users slammed the museum for the labeling, saying it perpetuated a stereotype about Black people and Black culture. Some argued that the ill-conceived move further highlighted how some don’t take the federal holiday seriously or understand its significance.

This is ridiculous and a mockery of Juneteenth… I’ve never had a watermelon salad or even heard of it.. smh pic.twitter.com/J6BV7F9hx8

— lexlex (@WishYaHadAlexis) June 4, 2022

Indianapolis Children’s Museum really? A watermelon salad in celebration of Juneteenth? I want to know who sat in on that meeting & thought that was a good idea…… 😒

— ♡ (@SitBack_WatchMe) June 4, 2022

I’m really starting to get tired of F6 folks and their mocking Juneteenth Day, watermelon is not a “black people thing”… y’all are making my ass itch with this shimata! https://t.co/VvC9JbaChR

— Nicholas Devanté Wolfwood🍵🥃 (@NejikoDaSavage) June 4, 2022

Celebrated on June 19, the holiday commemorates the end of United States slavery—specifically, the day when a group of enslaved people in Galveston, Texas, learned they’d been granted freedom more than two years after President Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation.

The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis responded to some of the criticism on its Facebook page, insisting its team conducts thorough research when curating a menu for special events. They said red foods, such as watermelon, “are a staple of Juneteenth Celebrations, including our food court manager’s family Juneteenth celebrations.”

The museum has since pulled the item from its cafeteria and issue a public apology.

“As a museum, we apologize and acknowledge the negative impact that stereotypes have on communities of color,” it wrote in a statement provided to the IndyStar. “The salad has been removed from the menu. We are currently reviewing how we may best convey these stories and traditions during this year’s Juneteenth celebration as well as making changes around how future food selections are made by our food service provider.”

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