On Feb. 8, Brown, who was then a senior at the school, led a walkout
of more than 200, mostly Black, fellow students.
Students, teachers and advocates fight against censorship in Alabama
schools
[link removed]
Rhonda Sonnenberg Read the full piece here
[link removed]
Friend,
Jamiyah Brown and about 30 other Black students at Hillcrest High
School in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, were excited about a Black History
Month program they were planning last winter.
They wanted to use dance, song and the spoken word to present a
timeline of Black history - from enslavement to the Jim Crow era
to the civil rights movement of the 1960s to the present.
The program was to open with several performers portraying enslaved
people in shackles and rags going about typical daily chores -
washing clothing, cooking and picking cotton - while singing
spirituals. An audio recording of shackles dropping to the ground was
to signify freedom.
As the timeline moved into segregation, a "Colored Only"
water fountain and enactment of Ruby Bridges' integration of a
Louisiana school were to have appeared on stage, followed by the March
on Washington, narration of Martin Luther King's credo of
peaceful resistance and then his assassination.
The students were to reenact the Black Panther movement followed by a
rap artist such as Tupac Shakur or Ice Cube talking about police
brutality and poverty. The program was to end on a hopeful note,
highlighting the founding of Black Greek-letter societies and ending
with all the performers holding hands on stage as one strong unit.
School administrators nixed the plan.
The assistant principal told the students that the topic of slavery
"made people uncomfortable" and that the Black Panthers
[link removed]
section had "traumatized" her, according to Brown.
Instead, she instructed the students to perform "happy
songs" by Beyoncé and the Jackson 5, Brown said, quoting
her.
Read More
[link removed]
In solidarity,
Your friends at the Southern Poverty Law Center
The SPLC is a catalyst for racial justice in the South and beyond,
working in partnership with communities to dismantle white supremacy,
strengthen intersectional movements, and advance the human rights of
all people.
Friend, will you make a gift to help the SPLC fight for
justice and equity in courts and combat white supremacy?
Donate
[link removed]
--
Unsubscribe [link removed] | Privacy Policy [link removed] | Contact Us [link removed]
Southern Poverty Law Center
400 Washington Avenue
Montgomery, AL 36104
334.956.8200 // splcenter.org
[link removed]
Copyright 2023