San Diego Union-Tribune

SCHOOL RESPONDS TO COMPLAINT ABOUT MENU

- BY ELISABETH FRAUSTO Frausto writes for the U-T Community Press.

Shortly after Martin Luther King III spoke Feb. 23 at La Jolla Country Day School about gratitude and racism, the school’s food provider, Sage Dining Services, offered a lunch designed to present a “Taste of the African Diaspora.”

A person who signed an email “a concerned and hurt student” contacted the La Jolla Light, a publicatio­n of the U-T Community Press, after the lunch, pointing out that the menu included “stereotypi­cal African dishes” such as collard greens, fried chicken tenders and watermelon. Those items have long been associated with racial stereotype­s.

The email said the student and others were “horrified” and “considered this to be highly offensive and disgracefu­l.” Tiffany Truong, director of marketing and communicat­ions for La Jolla Country Day, responded that members of the school administra­tion with whom she consulted hadn’t heard any complaints, and she added that “the Taste of the African Diaspora lunch was one of the highly lauded lunches by our community in honor of Black History Month.”

The menu, which also included West African vegetable stew, Creole shrimp, Jamaican jerk tofu, African pilau masala rice and more, was “thoughtful­ly crafted by our educators and the Black Student Union,” she said.

“We wanted to create a conscious experience that highlights the importance of food in the lives of people of African American and Black descent,” Truong said.

She said the theme was inspired by an event called “Taste the Diaspora” in Detroit.

Each dish was accompanie­d by a descriptio­n of its history, and books were placed around the cafeteria for people to read about African American and Black culture, Truong said.

“Some students were curious about the menu, which sparked meaningful conversati­ons about food and culture,” she said.

She encouraged any students who have concerns about the menu to contact school administra­tors directly.

The La Jolla Light requested a comment from Country Day School Head of School Gary Krahn, but none was provided.

Items on similar menus have caused schools elsewhere to issue apologies, including in the past month.

On Feb. 1, the first day of Black History Month, students at Nyack Middle School in New York were scheduled to be served cheesestea­ks, broccoli and fruit for lunch, but the meal was changed to chicken, waffles and watermelon.

In a letter to parents, school Principal David Johnson blamed the food vendor, Aramark, for serving what he called an “inexcusabl­y insensitiv­e” meal. Aramark soon apologized.

In February 2015, the president of Wright State University in Ohio and its dining vendor, Chartwells Higher Education Dining Service, apologized for a Black History Month menu that featured fried chicken and collard greens.

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