The Courier-Journal (Louisville)

What did Berea do? The Mountainee­rs fought back

- Dr. Ricky L. Jones is the BaldwinKin­g scholar-in-residence at the Christina Lee Brown Envirome Institute and professor of Pan-African studies at the University of Louisville. His column appears biweekly in the Courier-Journal. Follow him on Threads, Faceb

Legalized anti-blackness is not new in America. In fact, it’s been around since the country’s founding and may endure until its fall. Though many refuse to admit it, but the latest display of this American reality was the U.S. Supreme Court’s dissolutio­n of racial considerat­ion in college admissions.

Oddly, there has been very little substantiv­e public conversati­on by many colleges and universiti­es on how this will impact various realities concerning the already paltry numbers of Black students, faculty, staff and administra­tors. When most university administra­tors or observers talk about these issues (if they talk about them at all), they often center on what the Supreme Court’s decision says and what they cannot do because of the current legal reality. But should we always passively follow the law? Martin Luther King Jr. said no.

In fact, King said people “have a moral responsibi­lity to disobey unjust laws.” After all, remember slavery was legal in America for 246 years. Jim Crow segregatio­n was legal for 58 more. King wrote in his “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” “We can never forget that everything Adolph Hitler did in Germany was 'legal' and everything the Hungarian freedom fighters did in Hungary was 'illegal.' It was 'illegal' to aid and comfort a Jew in Hitler's Germany.”

Black Americans have always fought against legalized racial persecutio­n

From the slave Elizabeth “Mum Bett” Freeman to Charles Hamilton Houston, Black Americans have always fought against legalized racial persecutio­n and some loyal allies have provided aid and comfort along the way. Kentucky’s tiny Berea College has such a noble history.

In 1904 Kentucky passed “An Act to Prohibit White and Colored Persons from Attending the Same School,” better known as the “Day Law” because it was introduced by Representa­tive Carl Day. Day said he was motivated to push the law after visiting Berea College, the states only racially-integrated school, and witnessing an interracia­l hug between two female students.

The virulently racist Day only served in Kentucky’s House of Representa­tives for three months before dying in office, but the law that carried his name had long term effects in that it was successful in legally mandating racial segregatio­n in the state’s educationa­l institutio­ns.

Under the leadership of President William G. Frost, Berea stood alone and fought back.

Berea did not remain silent. It did not change the name of its diversity office. It did not bow. It did not cower or make excuses. The Berea Mountainee­rs fought back. They fought it all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court even after Kentucky convicted the school of criminal charges.

One day you should read the entire story of Berea’s war against educationa­l injustice in Kentucky. If you do, you’ll learn that the mighty Mountainee­rs ultimately lost their Supreme Court case in 1908. But that’s not really the point. The point is Berea tried!

The sin isn’t in fighting and losing. The sin is in not trying at all. Or even worse, not trying and then lying and gaslightin­g people in an attempt to convince us that you are doing your level best to do the right thing.

In a country where it was once illegal for most Black people to learn to read and write, their educationa­l possibilit­ies are once again under attack. It will be interestin­g to see which schools in and outside Kentucky will fight back this time around.

No matter what, remember President William G. Frost and the Berea Mountainee­rs! They were true titans! Sure, they lost in the end. American racism is a tough opponent. But sometimes you win even when you lose if you fight for the right thing.

 ?? SCOTT UTTERBACK/THE COURIER JOURNAL ?? Lincoln Hall, pictured in 2020, is the second-oldest permanent structure on Berea College’s campus. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1975 for its significan­ce in the U.S. civil rights movement.
SCOTT UTTERBACK/THE COURIER JOURNAL Lincoln Hall, pictured in 2020, is the second-oldest permanent structure on Berea College’s campus. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1975 for its significan­ce in the U.S. civil rights movement.
 ?? COURTESY BEREA COLLEGE ?? Berea College, which educated both black and white students, was founded in 1855 while Kentucky was still a slave state. This photo shows Berea College students in 1887.
COURTESY BEREA COLLEGE Berea College, which educated both black and white students, was founded in 1855 while Kentucky was still a slave state. This photo shows Berea College students in 1887.

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