The following is an editorial written by Dennis Shiraev ’12, Editor-in-Chief, and Oliver Renick ’12, Executive Editor. It will appear in the semester’s final issue of The Cornell Review, which hits newsstands Wednesday.
During a protest by Africana Center supporters on Friday, one African-American graduate student took the microphone and told the crowd bluntly: “[I am] not going to be forced to go into buildings with pictures of people who do not look like me.”
In an attempt to express her anger about the Africana program being merged into the College of Arts & Sciences, she exemplified the same intolerant philosophy that caused restaurant and store owners in the 1960s to hang ‘no blacks’ signs on their front doors.
Racism is alive and well at Cornell University.
In the spring of 2009 the Program House community erupted over the administration’s routine fiscal review of the program. This marked the first step in an ongoing series of events created by Cornell’s most vocal minority representatives that has created feelings of anger, betrayal, and prejudice on campus. After administrators repeatedly assured that the Program Houses were not at any kind of risk, members of Ujamaa, Black Students United, Latino Living Center, and the LGBT community continued to falsely claim that the University was trying to get rid of ‘safe spaces’ at Cornell.
Again, in the fall of 2009, the Program House leaders injected racial tension into the community when American Indian students and faculty at Akwe:kon circulated an email with hurtful statements about Europeans and linked to a website supporting the release of convicted murderers and terrorists.
The trend was continued last month when Ujamaa and Black Students United hosted a Unity Hour where students and professors held a conference call with convicted cop-killer Eddie Conway. Those leading the event introduced Conway as a political prisoner who had the misfortune of being a black man targeted by a justice system – run by whites – that targets the African-American community. The event contributed nothing positive to race relations on campus.
The Program House community’s efforts to paint itself as the victim culminated this week after the University announced that the Africana Research and Studies Center would come under the wing of Arts & Sciences. The Africana Center is currently operated under the supervision of the Provost’s office. Like a moth to the light, ex-Ujamaa RHD Ken Glover led his team of radical activists from the Program Houses to shout cries of racism and bigotry on the steps of Day Hall.
While claiming to protest against the ‘lack of dialogue’ between the University and Africana, students and faculty members fired one epithet after another. Ken Glover claimed the move was based on “white supremacy.” Prof. N’Dri T. Assié-Lumumba, advisor to Black Students United, called the move “institutional racism.” Robert Harris Jr., Director of the Africana Center, further isolated the Black community from the greater student body by saying, “We don’t need [the administration’s] help.”
If this is their idea of dialogue, silence is golden. But could they be right?




