In an Independence Day message, NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick questioned the value the Fourth of July holds for black Americans, since the United States was founded on the backs of African-American slaves.

โ€œHow can we truly celebrate independence on a day that intentionally robbed our ancestors of theirs?โ€ Kaepernick wrote on Twitter.

He instead touted the liberating effects of a recent visit to what appeared to be Ghana.

โ€œTo find my independence I went home,โ€ he finished the tweet.

A minute-long video Kaepernick included in the tweet shows various clips from a trip he took with his partner Nessa Diab: villagers welcoming him as he helps them with a building project, a visit to a municipal hospital in the city of Keta, and footage of a European-built slave-trader castle on Ghanaโ€™s coast.

It wasnโ€™t clear from the video if his trip included other countries, or if he would be releasing more footage.

A representative for Kaepernick did not immediately respond to a HuffPost request for comment.

Kaepernickโ€™s commentary echoes the famous thoughts of the great author and abolitionist Frederick Douglass, an escaped slave, in his famous 1852 speech, โ€œWhat to the slave is the fourth of July?โ€

In fact, the video begins with the voice of a narrator reciting one of the speechโ€™s lines: โ€œWhat have I or those I represent to do with your national independence?โ€

The remainder of the video is set to the music of Talib Kweli and 9th Wonderโ€™s song โ€œEvery Ghetto.โ€

As a back-up quarterback for the San Francisco 49ers, Kaepernick made waves in August 2016 when he began a months-long protest against racial injustice by refusing to stand for the national anthem before games. Initially he sat the anthem out entirely, but after a discussion with an NFL player who served in the military, he changed the gesture to a kneel.

โ€œI am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color,โ€ Kaepernick said by way of explaining his decision after the first protest.

The move inspired other football players and student athletes to follow Kaepernickโ€™s model in protest over police brutality toward people of color and other injustices.

Kaepernick also pledged to donate $1 million in charity to underserved communities. As of June, he had given $700,000.

Kaepernick opted out of his contract with the 49ers in March, becoming a free agent. He has yet to be signed by another team.

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