MAIA MCDONALD
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MAIA MCDONALD ✿
After Racist Video, Threats And Slurs, Students Walk Out At East Side High School: ‘Something Needs To Be Done’
By Maia McDonald ✦ May 19, 2022 | Block Club Chicago
Chicago Public Schools is investigating after George Washington High School students reported racist incidents, including someone writing in a bathroom that a Black student would be burned and hanged.
EAST SIDE — Students at an East Side school walked out of class Wednesday in a rebuke of administrators they said have been slow to address racist behavior.
Dozens of students at George Washington High School, 3535 E. 114th St., filed out of the building 11:30 a.m. Wednesday for the action. It was planned by the school’s Black Student Alliance after three recent racist incidents, including one where a Black student was likened to a monkey in a video and another where a Black student was threatened, organizers said.
George Washington has more than 1,500 students and is 89.2 percent Latino, 5.6 percent Black and 3.8 percent white and 1.6 percent identifying as other races, according to Chicago Public Schools data.
Students said they hope the walkout prompts CPS leaders to intervene.
“I know there are rules and regulations, but when my classmates are being traumatized, are being harassed, being bullied in the hallway — I’m sorry, that process takes too long,” said Greg Miller, who led the walkout. Miller is a sophomore and member of the Black Student Alliance. “Something needs to be done here and now.”
Members of the Black Student Alliance said Black students feel unsafe and uncomfortable at the school.
“Even if I haven’t experienced it myself — Black trauma — I still know that there’s still trauma there no matter what,” said junior Destiny Vasquez, a member of the Black Student Alliance. “Nobody should experience trauma. That’s not right. So I do whatever I can to support Black students. … I want to make sure everyone at this school feels safe.”
Vasquez said there has long been racial tension in the school and community.
“I hope all the students can continue to speak out,” Vasquez said. “That’s why really I’m trying to speak out my best and show that your voice really does matter no matter what. Even if administration isn’t agreeing with what you’re saying, your voice and your experiences should be out there if you’re comfortable with it.”
Recent racist incidents have highlighted those concerns, students said. In one, a video circulated on social media showing a Black student dancing at a recent pep rally, but edited to feature monkey noises. Students said someone also wrote a message in a school bathroom saying the student in the video would be burned and hanged, and a non-Black student used a racist slur toward a Black student teacher.
A CPS spokesperson said the district is investigating the incidents at George Washington.
CPS “strives to provide a safe and welcoming learning environment for every student. All students are expected to follow the Student Code of Conduct (SCC) and all rules and policies set by the Chicago Board of Education and CPS,” the spokesperson said in a statement.