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Forum on blackface to be held

By Andrew Scoggin

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Published: Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Updated: Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Associated Student Government, the Coalition of Colors and Student Affairs will host a forum Thursday to discuss a Halloween incident involving the use of blackface, Northwestern President Morton O. Schapiro announced in an e-mail to the NU community Tuesday.

In photos found on Facebook and circulated in e-mails to student group leaders, two males are pictured in blackface. One male is pictured in front of a poster of the late musician Bob Marley, and is dressed in a shirt with the word “Jamaica” on it. The other is dressed as a woman and is holding a tennis racket in front of a wall with a Northwestern logo.

The students believed to be involved in the incident are student-athletes. One student believed to be involved declined to comment on whether he was dressed in blackface and said Tuesday he is “staying out of it completely as of right now.”

“While I fully support the principles of free expression, at the same time I am deeply disappointed to see any example of insensitivity that demeans a segment of our community,” Schapiro wrote in the e-mail. “It is my hope that we can use this incident as a catalyst to reflect upon the values of inclusiveness and respect for others that are central to Northwestern’s mission.”

Marcus Shepard, an intern in African American Student Affairs, said he found photos of the students on Facebook on Sunday morning. He said the students had been tagged in another student’s photo album, but said the photos have since been removed.

“I know people who’ve dressed up as African Americans before, and they haven’t felt the need to paint their skin,” said Shepard, a Communication junior and member of For Members Only. “I was kind of taken aback by the whole situation.”

ASG President Mike McGee said though certain groups are organizing the Thursday forum, nearly all of campus is involved in the event. The forum is meant to voice opinions from all sides of the issue, he said.

“(Race) is a tough issue,” the Communication senior said. “If there was an answer, we wouldn’t have the problems we’re having now.”

Another incident involving the use of blackface occurred in 2007. According to DAILY archives, two NU Ph.D. students dressed in blackface for a Halloween party.

“What it shows is that we haven’t done as good of a job of addressing our history of racial conflict,” McGee said. “A lot of students just don’t know what’s gone on on our campus.”

Northwestern Community Development Corps Co-Chair Kristen Cragwall, along with fellow co-chair Sharanya Jaidev, wrote a Letter to the Editor published in Tuesday’s DAILY about the blackface incident. Cragwall said her initial reaction was shock.

“I don’t think this is a minority group issue on campus,” said Cragwall, a Communication senior. “This is something that affects everyone. This needs to be a broader Northwestern community issue.”

Interim Dean of Students Burgie Howard said campus reaction to the incident has been “swift” and people are “interested and concerned.” He said that he didn’t think any University rules were violated, so it is not necessarily a “disciplinary situation.”

“Hopefully we can learn from this incident and other incidents to say, ‘How do we make sure our community is aware of these things so that we don’t have incidents going forward?’” he said.

Both Howard and Schapiro said they will be at Thursday’s forum.

Even if no disciplinary action is taken against the students, McGee said what they did affects all of NU.

“We are one community,” he said. “All of our actions, whether they’re positive or negative, reflect the Northwestern community.”

Christina Salter contributed reporting.

andrewscoggin2007@u.northwestern.edu

Comments

16 comments
Daniel
Sun Nov 8 2009 02:28
Um, millions of girls across the nation dress like prostitutes every year, but a couple of guys dress like black celebrities and it is a big deal. What a waste of time.
joejoe
Sat Nov 7 2009 12:30
Hey am blacck but I don*t take too much offensive over these stupid jokes! You know, sometimes one has to let the pig inside the body out! Sometimes its a white pig and sometimes a black one! :-)
ziggy
Fri Nov 6 2009 11:48
Seriously? Who the eff cares?

"The long history of slavery"... eff you. You weren't a slave, nobody dressed up as a slave, so this has NOTHING to do with it. Nice straw man argument.

Your name
Thu Nov 5 2009 23:12
What is realy disconcerning is the inability of people to decipher the difference between "blackface" and dressing up as a black celebrity. I guess its offensive that black people can be so successful that white people want to dress up as them for halloween. Northwestern has been embarassed, not by these two students, but by their reaction to this which shows it is the university and certain groups(which seek to be seen a group and therefore seperate from everyone else(irony anyone) which cannot get past race. Lets condemn racism when it is truly racism instead of trivializing it by yelling racism at any opportunity possible. Where is the outrage from Fred Armestein playing Obama on SNL. Where is the outrage from Dan Akroyd(starring opposite Eddie Murphy) painted black wearing dreads with a raggae hat in the movie "Trading Places"? The real victims in this story are the two white males who undoubtedly will be labeled racists by so many who dont even know them.
Jack
Thu Nov 5 2009 21:44
I see no racism in this. I'm white and gay - and if some one calls something gay in a demeaning fashion it does not make me think they are using it to abuse the homosexual comunity - if some one goes as a gollywog to a costume party do you think they are atepmting to incite racism? I'v never seen a skin'head neo-nazi dress like that so i doubt it.
Being hypo-sensitive will only ever leave you the victim.
old timer
Thu Nov 5 2009 20:52
It's just a matter of time til they grow up. Maturity, it's called.
Neo
Thu Nov 5 2009 20:48
It is the long history of slavery that is the core of why this is offensive. Caucasian people will never know the struggle the black man/woman went through (is still struggling with in current society to a degree). African-American people have been oppressed for a very long time. Some might argue that the oppression still continues. Slavery is a wound that will take many centuries for it to clearly heal. Then as the human race, evolve into a better society with no racial divisions. Thank you.
voice of reason
Thu Nov 5 2009 14:06
It's more than a costume, ladies and gentlemen. It's the lack of knowledge, sensitivity, and forethought that allows a person to think it's acceptable to paint their face black for the puposes of imitating an African-American despite the derogatory and oppressive history of the practice. Did you know that there are Jamaicans of all skin tones and ethnicities? There are, watching an Asian person speak Jamaican Patois is delightful in its juxtaposition. Yet, this guy decided he needed to paint his face black. When I was Wonder Wonder 2 years ago, everyone knew who I was without me buying pale/ivory cake makeup and smearing it on my face. The black man I saw who was teh Joker didnt need to do it either. Intelligent creativity and thoughtfulness would have allowed them their "fun" without offending fellow collegians and possibly an entire race of people.
NUDiscrimination@live.com
Thu Nov 5 2009 10:28
ATTENTION NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY FACULTY, STAFF, AND STUDENTS
If you have ever been a victim of racial discrimination, harassment, retaliation, or have been a victim of racial profiling from Northwestern University; please contact NUDiscrimination@live.com Please provide your name, email, phone number, and a very brief description of your experiences. I would like to see if you would be willing to take a stand in order to help make a positive change for the Northwestern community.
Victim
Thu Nov 5 2009 03:58
I am offended by this forum. I believe we should have another forum to address how people like me were offended by this forum.
paul
Wed Nov 4 2009 23:15
I'm dressing up as a holocaust survivor next year, in a skull cap, with numbers on my arm. Feel better?
T. R. Yandstopit
Wed Nov 4 2009 20:26
Dear Northwestern University members who find this costume offensive,

Hold your forum. You wont change a thing. I'm wearing black face as Lil Wayne next year. You cant do anything about it because I have a right to dress however I want. I love America and its freedom of speech.

Good day to you.

Jake
Wed Nov 4 2009 19:50
Wow, "costume" is right - what has our university come to if we are overreacting to something like this? If you are offended by this, then you deserve to be! I am offended by certain widespread occurrences on campus too (certain practices associated w/ some sororities and frats), but I don't dwell on them. There are a lot more extreme, blatant, and intentionally offensive displays going on elsewhere, as well as acts that actually merit some type of disciplinary action. This is not one of them. This is a form of free expression (these were Northwestern students - I doubt they dressed up to purposely offend people or degrade the African-American race) It's time to move on and re-focus our energies on issues that matter.
yankee
Wed Nov 4 2009 18:59
wait how is bob marley and i guess a williams sister being racist, i know blackface has in the past been used in a racist way, but I dont see how being 2 very successful black people was meant to be racist, there is no way these kids meant to be racist. Get over yourself for members only
costume
Wed Nov 4 2009 18:55
really...a halloween costume is the cause of all this...wow halloween wont be any fun if you have to do politically correct costumes i guess we will have to go back to wearing gorilla costumes although that could be twisted into racist as well.
Offended
Wed Nov 4 2009 17:07
Idiots.