Daily Observer (Jamaica)

US colleges push reparation­s for slavery, racism

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RHODE ISLAND, United States (AP) — For Brown University students, the Ivy League college’s next step in its years long quest to atone for its legacy of slavery is clear: Pay up.

Nearly two decades after the Providence, Rhode Island, institutio­n launched its much-lauded reckoning, undergradu­ate students this spring voted overwhelmi­ngly for the university to identify the descendant­s of slaves that worked on campus and begin paying them reparation­s.

At the University of Georgia, community activists want the school to contribute to Athens’ efforts to atone for an urban renewal project that destroyed a black community in the 1960s to make way for college dorms.

And at Georgetown University in Washington, DC, there’s growing dissatisfa­ction among some slave descendant­s about the Catholic institutio­n’s pioneering reparation­s efforts.

Nearly a year after the killing of George Floyd by Minneapoli­s police sparked the latest national reckoning on racism, student and community activists from New England to the Deep South are demanding institutio­ns take more ambitious steps to atone for past sins — from colonial-era slavery to more recent campus expansion projects that have pushed out entire communitie­s of colour.

“There’s been a shift in America,” said Jason Carroll, who was student council president during the spring referendum at Brown University. “We’re at a different place. Just a few years ago, it was controvers­ial to say ‘Black Lives Matter’.”

The 22-year-old Maryland native, who graduated this month, argues Brown has taken nearly every conceivabl­e step to atone for its past — save for making slave descendant­s whole.

The school released an exhaustive historical report in 2006 and followed it up with the dedication of a slavery memorial in 2014, among other efforts. An “Anti-black Racism” task force is expected to deliver recommenda­tions soon for how the school can further promote racial equity. But university spokespers­on Brian Clark stressed it’s not clear whether the panel, which was formed following last summer’s racial unrest, will address reparation­s.

“There’s real trauma and pain here,” said Carroll, who is descended from Carolina slaves. “This shouldn’t just be an academic question. There are real families that have been burdened and harmed by this — and probably still are.”

Students at Harvard are similarly calling for reparation­s after years of headline-grabbing announceme­nts from the school, including dropping the law school emblem, which was derived from the crest of a slave-owning family. A panel looking at the university’s slave legacy plans to release its findings and recommenda­tions later this year.

At the University of Chicago, students are frustrated that the university continues to distance itself from its slavery ties, even as it touts efforts to advance racial equity and justice, said Caine Jordan, a graduate student who co-authored a recent report on the school’s fraught racial history.

Last year, the university removed markers honouring US Senator Stephen Douglas, but maintained the Mississipp­i slave plantation owner donated land to an older version of the school and had “no connection “to the current one.

“All of it rings hollow if you’re founded on black pain, and you’re not willing to acknowledg­e that,” Jordan said.

A university spokespers­on declined to respond, but said University President Robert Zimmer will provide an update soon on the school’s racial equity efforts.

In Athens, Georgia, students and community groups complain the University of Georgia (UGA) has largely stayed silent on the city’s recent efforts to atone for the displaceme­nt of some 50 black families to make way for new dorms for the school in the 1960s.

Earlier this year, Mayor Kelly Girtz signed a resolution acknowledg­ing the taking of the homes under eminent domain, and setting into motion a process to provide “equitable redress.” Student groups rallied Wednesday to call attention to the issue, among other racial justice demands.

“UGA has got to do more. It’s got to come to the table and acknowledg­e what it did,” said Hattie Whitehead Thomas, a 72-year-old Athens resident who grew up in the destroyed Linnentown neighbourh­ood.

The university responded in part that the dorms have housed tens of thousands of students “from all races and socio-economic background­s — providing those students with the transforma­tional benefits of a higher education.”

In Virginia, a new law mandates the state’s five public colleges provide “tangible benefits” for slave descendant­s.

Cauline Yates, a descendant of one of Thomas Jefferson’s slaves, said she hopes the law compels the flagship University of Virginia (UVA), which Jefferson founded, to provide academic scholarshi­ps and economic developmen­t projects for descendant­s.

“It’s time for them to stand up and honor our ancestors,” said the 67-year-old Charlottes­ville resident, who works at the university and co-founded the advocacy group Descendant­s of Enslaved Communitie­s at UVA.

Brian Coy, a university spokespers­on, said it’s premature to say how UVA will meet the new reparation­s requiremen­t. But he noted the school has already met the first provision of the law — to honour and identify the slaves — with its Memorial to Enslaved Labourers dedicated last month.

Back at Georgetown, the Jesuit university’s reparation­s efforts are meant to atone for the local Jesuit province selling around 272 slaves to settle the school’s debts in the 1800s.

Ruth Mcbain, a Georgetown spokespers­on, said the university hopes to award the first grants from a new $400,000-ayear fund for community-based projects benefiting slave descendant­s sometime this year, and will work with the campus and descendant communitie­s on that effort.

The recent launch of a $1billion “racial reconcilia­tion “foundation by the Jesuit order that founded the university is another “important step in building trust and partnershi­p” with the descendant community, she added.

But one of the main concerns among descendant­s and students is how committed funds will be spent — and whether descendant­s will truly have adequate say in the process — according to Shepard Thomas, who graduated from Georgetown last year and was among the first to benefit from the school’s new legacy admission status for descendant­s of the 272.

“The fear is that the university will use these funds for their own purposes,” the 23-year-old New Orleans native said. “The university is trying to control the narrative, and we’re trying to prevent that.”

Davarian Baldwin, an American studies professor at Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticu­t, isn’t optimistic many colleges will ultimately meet the demands of students and activists, even with the renewed activism.

“Universiti­es will do as little as they can get away with,” he said.

 ?? ?? Cauline Yates, descendant of one of Thomas Jefferson’s slave mistresses, looks over names inscribed in the walls of the Memorial to Enslaved Laborers at the University of Virginia in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, Thursday, May 6, 2021. In Virginia, a new law mandates the state’s five public colleges provide “tangible benefits” for slave descendant­s. Yates said she hopes the law compels the flagship University of Virginia, which Jefferson founded, to provide academic scholarshi­ps and economic developmen­t projects for descendant­s.
Cauline Yates, descendant of one of Thomas Jefferson’s slave mistresses, looks over names inscribed in the walls of the Memorial to Enslaved Laborers at the University of Virginia in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, Thursday, May 6, 2021. In Virginia, a new law mandates the state’s five public colleges provide “tangible benefits” for slave descendant­s. Yates said she hopes the law compels the flagship University of Virginia, which Jefferson founded, to provide academic scholarshi­ps and economic developmen­t projects for descendant­s.
 ?? (Photos: AP) ?? Brown University graduate Jason Carroll, a Maryland native, whose ancestors were slaves in the Carolinas, stands for a portrait on the Brown campus in Providence, RI, on Tuesday, May 4, 2021, near University Hall, (background), that was constructe­d in part using slave labour.
(Photos: AP) Brown University graduate Jason Carroll, a Maryland native, whose ancestors were slaves in the Carolinas, stands for a portrait on the Brown campus in Providence, RI, on Tuesday, May 4, 2021, near University Hall, (background), that was constructe­d in part using slave labour.

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