Privilege Meets Protest
at Duke University
By Kevin Prosen and Dave Zirin
In Durham North Carolina, a scant three miles separate
Duke from historically black North Carolina Central
University (NCCU), but the divide more resembles a
canyon. The seismic shock of the recent and now
notorious rape charges levied against the Duke
Lacrosse team has upturned this complex cultural
cocktail of a city, occupied by an aloof and
narcissistic private school catering mainly to wealthy
students rarely seen outside the gothic cloister of
their campus. Tuition at Duke is $43,000 per year,
more than four times the cost of NCCU and about $3,000
more than the median joint family income in Durham.
The case in question is by now widely known; Lacrosse
players at an elite campus hired two young
African-American women as exotic dancers, one a
student at NCCU. While details aren't yet clear, the
woman has injuries consistent with being raped and
sodomized. Lawyers for the team have gone on a
remorseless counter-offensive. A new well-heeled
booster club called the Committee for Fairness to Duke
Families hired the ultimate authority in smearing
women who "cry rape": Bill Clinton's former attorney
Bob Bennett. Bennett has already begun, saying, "A lot
of innocent young people and the families are being
hurt, and unfortunately this situation is being abused
by people with separate agendas. It is grossly unfair,
and cool heads must prevail."
Bennett and his team have also released personal
details about the assault victim. This gets the
spotlight off the confirmed squalidness of the case.
911 calls report racist epithets being screamed by men
in the party house. Ryan McFayden, a sophomore on the
Lacrosse squad, sent an e-mail dated the night of the
party describing in morbid detail his fantasy of
torturing the exotic dancers, saying, "I plan on
killing the bitches as soon as they walk in and
proceeding to cut their skin off while cumming in my
Duke issue spandex." The same McFayden had the unholy
arrogance to show up at the Take Back the Night Rally
on campus and while sexual assault survivors gathered
in a circle, he stood on the sidelines giving
interviews with the Chronicle, Duke's odious student
paper.
The racial climate on campus is utterly appalling and
this isn't isolated in the world of Lacrosse. Others
on campus have noted parties with vile themes, like
the "Viva Mexico" bash where students handed out
"Green Cards" for invitations. Danielle Terrazas
Williams, a grad student at Duke, told the
Independent, a local weekly "This [the rape] is not a
different experience for us [African-Americans] here
at Duke University. We go to class with racist
classmates, we go to gym with people who are racists.
That's not special for us." Commenting on the
persistent sexual harassment faced by black women at
Duke, Williams continued, "[it's] as if they're
re-enacting a rap video or something. As if we're
there to be their video ho..."
Many students, at least the ones that speak from the
conservative Chronicle's pulpit, don't seem to grasp
what the fuss is about. A screed by Duke junior
Stephen Miller is typical: "...we are Durham's main
attraction. Every time we set foot off-campus, we're
actually leaving the best thing the city has to
offer-and in turn, entering some of the most violent
neighborhoods in the state. Duke is Durham's
lifeblood, plain and simple. So if we want to stay on
campus or to limit our interaction with Durham...then
we have nothing to apologize for. If anything, the
insistence on interacting with Durham locals is
condescending to the town residents. Durham isn't a
petting zoo. The residents won't get lonely or
irritable if we don't play with them." Some have used
the term "lynch mob" to describe the reaction from the
Durham community to the alleged rape, a response that
has included vigils, noisy early morning protests, and
sit-ins on campus by outraged and offended students of
both Duke and NCCU. These hardly resemble the actual
lynch mobs that lurked in the Carolina landscape not
so long ago.
Clearly a little historical perspective is in order. Durham was a hub
of civil rights activism in the
South, led by poor blacks in the city as well as
students at North Carolina College (renamed North
Carolina Central University in 1969). When the
sit-ins of 1960 were sparked in nearby Greensboro,
Durham was one of the first cities in the country to
join the movement. Civil rights leaders like Howard
Fuller and Ann Atwater figure prominently in the
city's history.
Duke did not admit its first black student until 1961,
two years after the first desegregated school in
Durham and seven years after Brown v. Board of
Education. In 1967 the Afro-American Society at Duke
occupied the Allen Administration Building after
negotiations with the school administration to improve
the climate for blacks on campus led nowhere. Their
statement explained: "We seized the building because
we have been negotiating with Duke administration and
faculty concerning different issues that affect black
students for 2 1/2 years and we have no meaningful
results. We have exhausted the so-called 'proper'
channels." Progressive white students played a
positive role, holding off the police in defense of
the black students inside. The Allen Building
occupation led directly to the founding of Malcolm X
Liberation University, which sought to provide, in the
words of its founders, "a real alternative for black
people seeking liberation from the misconception of an
institutionalized racist education." Professors were
recruited largely from NCCU, as well as from the
non-academic activist milieu in town. In an ultimate
rejection of Duke's aloof stance toward the city, they
proclaimed "The accreditation for the university will
be granted by the Black community."
The student press seemed a bit more swept up back
then. Reading old issues of the Chronicle feels more
like finding a yellowed copy of Ramparts than the
servile stuff served up campus papers these days. The
central focus of the paper seemed to be Black Power,
the anti-war movement, "vanguard student action," and
legalizing marijuana. An editorial on the '69 Allen
Building occupation read: "The police were nothing
more than robots; they performed an inhuman act at the
bidding of the administration. The administration
took this action against students who are trying to
create a more human place for themselves amidst the
great machinery of this university...The
administration failed Duke's black students, and these
students then took a justified action to correct this
failure and handled themselves with dignity."
The campus press may have changed but the fights of
the sixties are hardly over. Activists on both
campuses that were separate just a few weeks ago have
begun to unite against the town's class divide and
racist bigotry. African-American students at Duke
occupied the Allen building again two weeks ago. A
large and inspiring vigil was held at the NCCU campus
last week, and activists have continued to put
pressure on. The solidarity built between activists
on both campuses and in the city is breaking down the
walls meant to keep them apart. The Lacrosse legal
team has called on the woman to drop all charges "so
the community can heal". Durham will only heal if its
proud tradition can be recalled in the name of
justice.
[Kevin Prosen is a free-lance writer living in Durham,
North Carolina. He can be reached at
kprosen@gmail.com. Dave Zirin is
the author of
"'What's My name Fool?'": Sports and Resistance in
the united States. Contact him at dave@edgeofsports.com]
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