Chattanooga Times Free Press

Howard University on a roll with addition of Hannah-Jones, Coates

- BY ASHRAF KHALIL

WASHINGTON — With the surprise twin hiring of two of the country’s most prominent writers on race, Howard University is positionin­g itself as one of the primary centers of Black academic thought just as America struggles through a painful crossroads over historic racial injustice.

But then, Howard University has never exactly been low-profile.

For more than a century, the predominan­tly Black institutio­n in the nation’s capital has educated generation­s of Black political and cultural leaders. Among them: Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall, civil rights icon Stokely Carmichael, Nobel laureate Toni Morrison and Vice President Kamala Harris.

But even by those standards, the school has been on a hot streak lately, with new funding streams, fresh cultural relevancy and high-profile faculty additions. This past week’s hiring of Nikole Hannah-Jones and Ta-Nehisi Coates serves as confirmati­on that Howard intends to dive neck-deep into America’s divisive racial debate.

Hannah-Jones opted against teaching at the University of North Carolina after a protracted tenure fight centered on conservati­ve objections to her work and instead chose Howard, where she will hold the Knight Chair in Race and Journalism. She rose to fame with The New York Times’ “1619 Project,” which reframed U.S. history through a racial equity lens and helped mainstream the idea of critical race theory — a topic that has become a core Republican talking point.

Coates has written critically on U.S. race relations for years and is closely associated with the argument for reparation­s for slavery.

Howard’s president, Wayne Frederick, doesn’t characteri­ze either hiring as overtly political, but merely a natural extension of the university’s motivating ethos.

“Howard University has been on that caravan for social justice for about 154 years,” Frederick said in an interview. “Howard has a rich legacy. … My responsibi­lity is to contempori­ze that and to bring faculty to the university who are in the contempora­ry space, speaking to present-day issues.”

Columbia University journalism professor Jelani Cobb, a Howard alumnus, described the moves as a pivotal jump in the university’s national stature. Howard, he said, had gone from traditiona­lly “punching above its weight class” to “moving up a whole division.”

All this is just a few years removed from a period of internal tension and financial scandal. In 2018, six employees were fired amid revelation­s of more than $350,000 in misappropr­iated grant funding, and students staged a nine-day occupation of the administra­tion building over demands that included better housing and an end to tuition increases.

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