Los Angeles Times

Video shows teacher in blackface

- By Colleen Shalby

A white high school educator has been placed on administra­tive leave after he wore blackface on Halloween and posed as the rapper Common.

The staff member at Milpitas High School, just north of San Jose, was placed on leave after a video of his actions was shared widely on Twitter, prompting outrage from students and parents. In the video, the teacher imitated the artist’s rapping from a 2018 Microsoft commercial. The Milpitas Unified School District superinten­dent has launched an investigat­ion into the educator’s actions.

Kerry Karrington, a junior at the school and vice president of the black student union, posted the video Friday. The educator, who has not been identified, is seen impersonat­ing Common rapping about artificial intelligen­ce.

“I go to a very diverse school, so to see that he really thought that was OK and it was a joke, it really hurts. Especially being one of a handful of black people that we have at our school,” she told KTVU-TV.

The teacher wore blackface for at least two school periods before faculty intervened, Karrington said. “Millions of people, not enough to eat, what will we do? With AI, Microsoft technology, the future is up to you,” the teacher is heard rapping in the video.

In a joint statement issued Sunday, school Principal Francis Rojas and Supt. Cheryl Jordan criticized the teacher’s actions while pointing to the community’s historic role on nationwide integratio­n efforts.

“In a school community where we welcome learners and families from over 50 languages who represent cultures and religions throughout the world, and where our long-standing neighborho­od, Sunnyhills, was establishe­d as the first city in the nation for planned integratio­n, it hurts to know that this type of cultural insensitiv­ity and lack of cultural awareness still hovers in the background.”

The district’s school board President Chris Norwood deemed the actions of the teacher as “inappropri­ate, unprofessi­onal and insensitiv­e.”

“As an African American man, the history of blackface reminds me of the cruelty, hatred and fear my parents and people of African ancestry have dealt with,” Norwood said.

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