Post-Race?
Party Crashers at Ole Miss: KKK rally scares off black recruits
By: devona walker (follow this member)
Mon, 11/23/2009 - 14:26
Down in Oxford, Mississippi, it appears the KKK are raising a stink again. Why? They are annoyed that the University of Mississippi has dropped the song From Dixie With Love, so they marched on campus over the weekend.
The problem here is that it happened on the weekend of the Louisiana State University game, it happened as the football department was trying to lure new recruits to the school, and it has caught the attention of other schools competing for that same talent.
Apparently several potential students, the football team was recruiting to attend the college, did not show due to the rally.The University of Mississippi coach thinks other schools are using the rally as an attempt to scare potential recruits from Ole Miss. And ultimately, the coach, Houston Nutt, doesn't believe it will work. He thinks the students will come to Ole Miss despite the rally.
I don't mean to make the obvious pun, but really this Coach Nutt is either a stone cold nut or just wildly optimistic.
Black folks, who are not from the south, are already hesitant about going to the south because of racism. A KKK rally on campus, the one place where students expect to be isolated from rampant racism, is going to affect your recruitment efforts.
I was once offered a job in Jackson at the state's largest newspaper. I had spent a few days in Mississippi prior meeting staff and whatnot. But it wasn't until I returned on my own and contemplated the reality of raising a child in the deep south that I ultimately turned down the job. I might be a wimp but I don't think I am that much different. Racism is a factor. It affects where black people choose to live. It has been one of the primary factors in ethnic migration patterns since the emancipation proclamation, and it will deter students from venturing down south.
And more importantly by choosing to ignore it, I think the University missed a very good opportunity to declare exactly what they stand for. This might have been a good move considering the great variety of "racism-free" environments from which black students can choose. Honestly, if you have the choice between two campuses one known for its diversity and the other that recently made news by having a vocal KKK chapter, which would you choose?
This coach's problem is he only thinks about the game and the win, he is not considering the environment in which he is asking his players to endure while they are not playing. He is not considering the racial profiling they might get from local law enforcement, the fear of venturing into the "wrong bar" or wrong neighborhood at the wrong time of the day. He is not thinking thoroughly enough about the reputation the deep south has with many African Americans who are not from the south.
About the KKK protest
About a dozen Klan members "briefly" congregated on campus in front of approximately 250 hecklers. Nutt, who is in his second year with the football program, said he has never witnessed any racial problems at Ole Miss. The majority of the football team is black and the 10-person on-field coaching staff is split evenly, making it one of the most diverse in major college football."This is a wonderful community," Nutt said. "It's one of the most beautiful campuses in the country and you've got a program that's about to go to back-to-back bowls ... I just wish (recruits) would come and see it for themselves. Don't let someone give you some bad information."
As beautiful as that campus might be, the reality is it will not protect students from racism. And while I personally know that Oxford is perhaps one of the more progressie cities in Mississippi, most black folks who have never been to Mississippi do not. All they know: It's a small town in the deep south. And what the world knows about the south is racism, segregation, abject poverty, Emmett Till and that backwoods brand of "justice."
Don't get me wrong, I love the south. I love the green rolling hills, the southern brogue, the food, the music, etc. But you cannot honestly expect young, talented black athletes and nonathletic students to choose to live in an environment where the KKK rallies at the school and the school's response is to shrug it off.
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COMMENTS
Dear Devona,
I understand your hesitation about living in the south because you do hear about a lot of racial divides in the news media. But Houston Nutt is right: "Don't let someone teach you bad information." Most of this racial information is nothing but bad information.
I grew 5 minutes outside of Jackson, MS, went to the top public high school in the state, and now go to Ole Miss, a campus know for its racial history. We have a group on campus, One Mississippi, that is making huge strides at bringing people from all walks of life together. We just elected a black student government president with a landslide majority. Sure, there are a few people that ignorantly still hold on to racial problems, but they are a very, very small minority at Ole Miss. And we, the larger Ole Miss community, does not support that at all.
However, I'm very offended at your accusations that Oxford is a bad environment for black people. Even though you say later on that Oxford is a very progressive town, you butcher it just two paragraphs above. I know many, many black people at Ole Miss, and they can not imagine going to college in a more warm and welcoming environment. I have yet to see or hear of any type of racial profiling or any other racial problem, for that matter. It's this bad information from someone that has never lived here that gives Mississippi a bad rap.
And about the KKK: The University of Mississippi is a public, state-funded university. Therefore, we (just like any other public venue) have to abide by the Constitution. Free Speech is a right that we, as a University, are not allowed to deny to any organization. The KKK submitted a permit to speak, and we had no other choice but to allow it. You shrug off the fact that they were given an hour time slot to speak but only stayed 10 minutes because of constant uproar of disgust. I participated in a student-led protest against the KKK that morning, and I was proud to see the turn out to silence the KKK and let everyone know that Ole Miss does not support such filth.
Ole Miss is a top university in Mississippi and in the nation. We have the 3rd best honors college, a top 10 business school, and top 10 accounting school. We have 97.7% acceptance rate into medical schools across the nation. The problem with Ole Miss (and Mississippi) is that we are slandered and chastised according to "bad information."
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