The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Students ‘no longer members’ of school after racist video

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A Catholic high school in Philadelph­ia says students responsibl­e for a racist video that showed teenage white girls in blackface are “no longer members of this school community.”

The video circulated on social media and sparked a protest a week ago at St. Hubert Catholic High

School for Girls. The protesters included parents of two former students who told The Philadelph­ia Inquirer their children faced a hostile and unwelcomin­g climate because they were Black.

The video showed several white teen girls, with one spray-painting the face of another with a dark color and yelling “Know your roots!” and “It’s February!”

and “You’re nothing but a slave.” The girl with the blackface then declares: “I’m Black and I’m proud!” Other girls present laugh throughout the video.

“The severity of the situation at hand demanded and the repugnant nature of the behavior on the part of some of our students demanded that we swiftly conduct a thorough investigat­ion,” St. Hubert’s officials said in a statement. “As a result, the young women ... responsibl­e for this situation have been identified and they are no longer members of this school community.”

Officials at the school and the archdioces­e of Philadelph­ia didn’t say whether the students had been expelled or were asked to withdraw. Those identified as participat­ing did face suspension­s before the investigat­ion concluded, archdioces­e spokespers­on Ken Gavin told the Inquirer.

The school had said earlier that two girls were “no longer present” at the school and were being discipline­d. The school switched last week to flexible instructio­n, with students completing coursework at home, after unspecifie­d threats and canceled extracurri­cular activities. Students returned to in-person instructio­n Monday.

St. Hubert’s plans schoolwide anti-bias workshops with the Anti-Defamation League and says it will also work with the Office for Black Catholics and the Archbishop’s Commission on Racial Healing to create new school programs focused on “dialogue and prayer to address racism and provide restorativ­e resources,” the Inquirer said.

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