The Mercury News

School’s vow to address racism again questioned

San Jose Valley Christian alumni say reassuranc­es aren’t being met

- By Maggie Angst mangst@bayareanew­sgroup.com

When hundreds of alumni, students, former teachers and parents in San Jose’s Valley Christian High School community banded together last summer to call out what they saw as a culture of racism and discrimina­tion, they expected change.

Amid the backdrop of a national racial reckoning sparked by the Minneapoli­s police killing of Gorge Floyd, the school’s alumni gathered nearly 200 testimonia­ls from current and former students and submitted a letter to campus administra­tors in June with a list of 21 demands, from hiring a diversity counselor to making the work of the campus’ diversity committee more transparen­t to carefully selecting chapel speakers.

Administra­tors of the top-rated K-12 private school in South San Jose, which serves about 2,800 students, declared they got the message and pledged to chart a new path.

They held two listening sessions, began unconsciou­s bias and micro-aggression training for faculty members and hired a nationally recognized search firm to identify candidates for the new position of director of diversity.

Today, a group of remnant alumni who have been keeping close tabs on the school’s progress have concluded there has been little progress. Worse, they said, the school seems

to be moving backward, not forward.

For example, school administra­tors invited to speak at a teachers retreat a controvers­ial pastor known for preaching that the Bible and critical race theory — the belief that racism is ingrained in U.S. institutio­ns and White people benefit from it — are incompatib­le.

They also temporaril­y halted their search for a new director of diversity, and the school’s diversity and inclusion committee has stopped meeting.

“The combinatio­n of them not holding up their end of the compromise and then doing things that were so obviously backward has made us really upset,” said Sarah Brauer, an alumni leader. “The school just keeps failing.”

In response, Rob Valiton, chief operating officer at Valley Christian Schools, said in an interview Friday that the school recently relaunched its search for a director of diversity, and its diversity committee was just waiting to get direction from the eventual hire.

“I appreciate the passions that our alumni have for this change. I appreciate them actually holding us accountabl­e,” he said. “It’s important that we hire the right person, but we’re not resting on our laurels either. We know there’s work to get done and we’re committed to getting it done.”

Part of that work will entail convincing students and alumni to look beyond its recent track record.

Clifford Daughtery, the school’s president and CEO, wrote in a 2019 book that the nation’s Founding Fathers are being discredite­d for being slave owners even though “some could argue, for the most part, they treated their slaves with dignity and respect.” That same year, a teacher was placed on leave for alleged ties to a white supremacis­t and neo-Nazi group involved in the 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottes­ville, Virginia.

In a June 9, 2020, statement responding to the letter from alumni, Daughtery apologized for the “insensitiv­ity” of the passage in his book, which since has been stripped from future published copies, and acknowledg­ed that “further change must take place.”

Several months later, the school announced that Keith Crosby, lead pastor at San Jose’s Hillside Church, would be speaking at an upcoming teacher retreat. Alumni quickly uncovered a recent sermon in which Crosby had argued that “critical theory and intersecti­onality is based on revenge culture” and spewed a Russian state-sponsored disinforma­tion claim that Black Lives Matters protesters in Portland had burned a stack of Bibles. The school later said he wouldn’t be going after all, though not because of alumni backlash.

Then at the end of March, after an “exhaustive” six-month-long search for a director of diversity, Daugherty informed the school community that administra­tors were “unable to cross the finish line” despite having “some solid candidates.”

One of the final candidates, who requested not to be named, went through a three-month-long hiring process.

But during a Zoom meeting with members of the school’s board of directors in mid-January, it “became crystal clear that there was one, two, maybe three board members that just didn’t even agree that the school should create this position,” the finalist said.

“In my opinion, White supremacy won,” the candidate, who is a person of color, said. “I firmly believe that the principals and leaders of that school want to do this and want to see change, but you’ve got some powerful people there with deep pockets who have got a strangleho­ld on that institutio­n.”

Valiton, the school’s chief operating officer, disputed that idea, saying that he was “unaware of any board member objecting to this hire.”

The Valley Christian alumni still pressing for change span multiple generation­s but they all share the same goals: ensuring that future Valley Christian students of color are afforded a better experience and that all students are given a more well-rounded education than they were.

Ericka Dorsey, a graduate of the class of 2000, for instance, still vividly remembers how teachers singled her out during discussion­s about slavery and affirmativ­e action, how school leaders rejected her plea to start a Black student union, how coaches characteri­zed her defense in basketball practice as “too aggressive” and how she was forced to educate her own counselor on what HBCUs — Historical­ly Black Colleges and Universiti­es — were.

“As a Christian, as an American citizen, as a mother, I want the next Black mother who desires to give their child a Christian education to be able to go to Valley Christian and know that the words they’re saying and the scripture they’re professing matches the experience­s that their children will have in school,” she said. “And I want that child to know that their color is not only seen — but loved.”

 ?? ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? San Jose Valley Christian High School leadership is again being scrutinize­d by alumni.
ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER San Jose Valley Christian High School leadership is again being scrutinize­d by alumni.

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