This is a story about knowing when itâs absolutely OK to say nothing, or at the very least to realize your good experience doesnât negate someone elseâs bad. That lesson apparently isnât in the curriculum at the UNC Kenan-Flagler Business School, where four former students for some reason found it necessary to write an open letter to let the public know about the lack of racism theyâd experienced as a counterbalance to a recent lawsuit filed by a Black former student who said sheâd experienced racial discrimination at the school.
The four, Angelica Leigh, Ayana Younge, Chaitali Kapadia and Erin C. Long, all earned doctorate degrees from Kenan-Flagler, and their open letter details what they say are the schoolâs efforts to embrace diversity and assist students of color. The four women did not disclose their ethnicities in the letter, in which they wrote that, âwe are concerned with the characterization of the department that has been reported in the media.â
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âWe cannot speak to everyoneâs views about UNC or Kenan-Flagler, nor do we seek to diminish the experiences of others, but we can share our perspective and experience of the culture of the OB departmentâs Ph.D. program,â they wrote.
Excuse me if itâs a little difficult to not read their letter as diminishing the experiences of others, given it was written in the context of another student, Rose Brown, having just filed a racial discrimination lawsuit against the school in August.From NBC News
Rose Brown alleges in the lawsuit, filed last month in the U.S. District Court for North Carolinaâs Middle District, that some faculty members at the universityâs Kenan-Flagler Business School belittled her competence, scolded her after she was sexually assaulted, and encouraged her to underpay Black research participants, all before pushing her out of the schoolâs Ph.D. program, according to the lawsuit.
âIt was torture in a lot of ways. I was ostracized from a faculty standpoint. I was continuously berated with various comments,â Brown, 28, told NBC News. â It was humiliating. It was disheartening. It broke me down every day. I had panic attacks every time I went to school.â
Leigh, Younge, Kapadia and Long may not have felt like every day of trying to obtain their Ph.Ds was torturous, and thatâs fine. But they also werenât writing glowing open letters about how progressive Kenan-Flagler is on race and gender before Brown sued their alma mater either. If their goal wasnât to diminish Brownâs lived experience, mounting a self-directed PR campaign for the schoolâs diversity efforts seems like a weird way to make that point.
Keep in mind that Kenan-Flagler is only one of several schools at the UNC Chapel Hill campus. Another is the Hussman School of Media and Journalism, which you might remember as the institution that last year decided to revoke its offer of a tenured professorship from the New York Timesâ Nikole Hannah-Jones, a Black woman whoâs a winner of both a Pulitzer Prize and a MacArthur genius grant for her pioneering work in journalism. She also has a masterâs degree from UNC Chapel Hill, but that didnât stop the school from fumbling her appointment due to the objections of Walter Hussman, a Trump-supporting newspaper publisher who had the balls to accuse Hannah-Jones of lacking objectivity. She took her talents to Howard University instead. Maybe Leigh, Younge, Kapadia and Long just really, really care about their alma mater. Maybe they know something about Brownâs allegations that the rest of us donât. Or maybe theyâve been sippinâ yac with Hussman, who convinced them to stand on the same principles that had him all up in Hannah-Jonesâ business. Or maybe, just maybe, they shouldâve done the same thing they were doing before Brown filed her lawsuit: sat still and kept quiet about business that wasnât theirs.
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