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Campus denounces hate

Arelis Hernandez

Issue date: 9/12/07 Section: News
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Media Credit: Adam Fried

Discussion of racism and oppression - often perceived as a burden only for certain ethnic groups - flowed freely from students of all backgrounds Tuesday night as more than 250 people came together to address the university problem.

Campus organizations, including the Black Student Union and Community Roots, organized the speak-out rally in Cole Field House after more than 200 students voiced their concerns in a closed meeting Monday over the appearance of a noose outside the Nyumburu Cultural Center. Tuesday's event drew an outpouring of students, university officials and others who condemned the act and sought action from the entire student body.

In a show of support, campus leaders and officials including President Dan Mote, Nyumburu director Ronald Zeigler, Student Government Association President Andrew Friedson, Graduate Student Government President Laura Moore and many others delivered remarks.

"On the count of three everyone needs to yell," Friedson said, trying to animate the crowd. The crowd responded with deafening screams.

"You all officially participated in the speak out," he said.

Stefanie Brown, youth and college director for the national NAACP, told the crowd she was not happy to be in College Park because of the nature of the incident. Armed with fiery rhetoric, Brown said apathy is not an option.

"Honestly, I believe most of you will do nothing," Brown said. "If you leave here and do nothing, it will be like you hung the noose yourself."The event's organizers presented categories of discussion, such as policy, safety and education, to help direct the conversation toward a solution, said BSU president Altmann Pannell.

"We wanted to do things as a collective Terrapin body," Pannell said. "We have given people the option to speak out on different policy-oriented topics."

Sign-up sheets invited participants to air their views, though they were instructed to keep their comments to two or three minutes and to end on a positive note by proposing changes on the campus.

Yellow-shirted volunteers directed traffic into the field house, encouraging people to stand close to the stage on the field house floor. A line of students, arms crossed and shoulder-to-shoulder, stopped just in front of the platform as BSU officials addressed the group.

"This is bigger than a noose. It is bigger because we as a community know that something else is going on in the country," Pannell said. "It doesn't matter how big the knot was. It doesn't matter that is was hanging outside Nyumburu. ... What matters is that we are here today because we know there is something going on and people are not listening to us."
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Viewing Comments 1 - 6 of 8

Stacey Baca

posted 9/12/07 @ 8:21 AM EST

The action of hanging a rope in a tree does nothing to benefit anyone; instead, it is destructive and harmful to everyone in our society.

Dave-2002

posted 9/12/07 @ 9:22 AM EST

Let's put things into persepective here. There is no pattern of this on this campus. Frankly, it was probably some disgruntled geek or drunk frat boy. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Daryle

posted 9/12/07 @ 11:58 AM EST

Has anyone noticed that the new church on Metzerott Road looks like a Klansman? As a black man I find this extremely offensive. I get chills everytime I drive onto campus coming down Greenbelt Road. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Robin

posted 9/12/07 @ 12:31 PM EST

I'm not black, but I had the same reaction to that church when I saw it. Whether that architecture was intended to be subliminally representative or not, philisophical leanings and permission to act out on those thoughts are sometimes derived from the APPEARANCE of institutional approval -- as found in something as subliminally suggestive as the architecture of a building. (Continued…)

Matthew

posted 9/12/07 @ 3:36 PM EST

Any chance that this (the noose-hanging) was a fake hate incident, designed to elicit the overheated emotional response that it has? People are certainly free to react, and over-react in this manner, but I think we should reserve our outrage for serious racially-charged incidents, such as the murder of the three college students in Newark, NJ, and the savage assault on Mr. (Continued…)

chainsawdave

posted 9/15/07 @ 6:49 PM EST

I don't know WHERE this little in a tree incident occured,
but YES, do KEEP perspective > on college campus's across America the real threat is NOT against blacks but against white suburban students who get assaulted, robbed and worse usually at gun point by black urban thugs from the surrounding ghetto's, YES this happened in a rash of numerous attacks at Northwestern University and University of Chicago in recent years. (Continued…)

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