The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)
Social media, NAACP blame community for alleged racist actions of Shelton students
SHELTON — Whether a white student spitting on a black person at a museum celebrating African American culture was a case of overt racism or gross insensitivity, officials say they’ll do more to celebrate and encourage diversity in the city’s schools.
The Friday incident — which resulted in a group of about 100 students being kicked out of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C. — is the second recent example of a Shelton Intermediate School student drawing attention to the city for behavior seen at best as stupid.
Principal Dina Marks said that the student’s action over the weekend, while inappropriate, was not racially motivated.
But Valley NAACP President Greg Johnson, who led a protest rally only three weeks ago in response to an intermediate school student appearing in blackface in a Snapchat photo, says Shelton has a “major problem” and needs to institute a zero tolerance policy with regard to racism.
“You have not been proactive with these situations, but you react to the children of color who stand up to defend themselves immediately,” Johnson said in his statement to the Shelton community, which is 91.8 percent white, per census data. “This stops today, through cooperation or litigation. There will be accountability for the racist, vile environment that you all have allowed.”
Social media erupted after news of the student’s actions broke Oct. 11 when school Superintendent Chris Clouet posted on Facebook about the incident.
While there was consensus that the student acted wrongly by spitting over a balcony at a museum, many said it didn’t appear to be an intentionally racist act.
Others said it was further proof that racial insensitivity is rampant in the community where, some pointed out, a Ku Klux Klan imperial wizard lived in the 1980s.
Several said that regardless of the student’s motivation, parents should be doing more to teach their kids to respect others.
Johnson said he was disgusted.
“Not at the Lincoln or Washington monuments, but where AfricanAmericans are celebrated,” said Johnson. “A total and complete lack of respect, and one of the most degrading acts one can commit against another.”
Shelton Board of Education Chairman Mark Holden said for now, the situation is an administrative matter. School was out Monday for the Columbus Day holiday.
“I don’t have personal knowledge of what the student was thinking, but spitting indoors at a museum is incredibly disrespectful,” Holden said. “The fact it was an African American History Museum, and it landed on a black person, compounds the problem.”
Holden pointed out the latest incident occurred two weeks and two days after the NAACP had a rally outside of the Shelton School Board’s September meeting. More than a dozen NAACP members spoke at that meeting to condemn the district after a white Shelton Intermediate Student posted a picture on Snapchat in blackface with a racial slur in the caption.
Clouet said that the school had 12 chaperones — including Marks — for the 100 students on the trip.
Intermediate schoolaged students are allowed more freedom to tour independently in indoor locations determined to be “safe zones,” such as the Smithsonian, according to Clouet.
Chaperones are expected to be constantly moving around watching all children, he said. He did not address specifically where the chaperones were at the time or what, if anything, would be done about future events.
Clouet said it was too early to decide whether to cancel future Washington, D.C., trips.
The superintendent did say that in response to the incidents, a student ambassador program is being created to have older students visit younger ones to talk about cultural awareness and social justice.
Preliminary plans also are under way for a community forum and diversity training for students and adults at the intermediate school.
brian.gioiele@hearstmediact.com