Chicago Sun-Times

UNIVERSITY PREZ: FAR RIGHT HIJACKED KAEPERNICK’S PROTEST MESSAGE

- BYMAUDLYNE­IHEJIRIKA Staff Reporter Email: mihejirika@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ maudlynei

The message behind Colin Kaepernick’s protests — now morphed into # TakeTheKne­e — has been lost, hijacked by the far right to divide, when it had advocated one America, the president of one of the historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es said here.

“The Constituti­on absolutely protects our right to protest our government in a lawful way, and if you look back at how Colin Kaepernick’s protests started, it was a simple ‘ take a knee’ to protest unarmed black citizens in this country being killed by white officers,” Grambling State University President Richard Gallot Jr. said in a Chicago SunTimes interview.

“I think his protest was justified. But somehow the narrative has shifted. It has now become that those who take a knee are disrespect­ing the flag, which is not what it was,” Gallot said. “I don’t know how the narrative shifted, but it has shifted in such a way that the right is winning right now.”

In town to watch his football team — the 2016 national champs among historical­ly- black schools — play Clark Atlanta University at the Chicago Football Classic, Gallot spoke to the recent controvers­y over the protests, fueled by President Donald Trump’s comments that will hang thick over the young AfricanAme­rican athletes Saturday.

Speaking at a rally and in tweets, Trump had referred to the mostly African- American protesters as “sons of bitches,” urging the leagues to fire those employees kneeling during the anthem lastweeken­d.

“If we are all created equal under the law and we all are afforded equal protection under the law, then we should all be treated fairly. That was the original narrative behind the protests. I’msure there are data analytics that can better explain how the message shifted, but it has shifted, and with it public opinion,” Gallot said.

Relationsh­ave deteriorat­ed since a controvers­ial February Oval Office meeting between Trump and a host of HBCU presidents, where Trump promised support.

In May, however, Trump threatened to terminate some HBCUdesign­ated federal funds, describing them as affirmativ­e action. In August came Trump’s controvers­ial comments on the white supremacis­ts’ rally in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, which led HBCU leaders to seek postponeme­nt of the annual White House/ HBCU conference held lastweek. Trump refused. So only 29 of the 107HBCUs attended. Gallotwas onewho stayed away.

“This year, I was just simply too busy to fit that into the schedule,” he said, adding that he doesn’t expend anger or disappoint­ment on Trump’s actions.

“I think the worst thing we can do is get caught up in our feelings about this president. He’s going to be who he is, and if we forecast and plan based on what his Twitter feed is going to be tomorrow, it’s going to be a rough four years,’’ Gallot said.

 ?? | AP FILES ?? Colin Kaepernick takes a knee during the national anthem in 2016.
| AP FILES Colin Kaepernick takes a knee during the national anthem in 2016.
 ??  ?? Grambling State President Richard Gallot Jr.
Grambling State President Richard Gallot Jr.

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