An Open Letter to Students and Alumni of Color at Wheaton
College
Dear Students and Alumni of Color of Wheaton College,
Many of you have recently seen DannyAguilar’s post regarding racism at Wheaton.
I had the privilege of watching Danny and a group of motivated,
dedicated, and brilliant students respond to the events of #chapeltweets in February,
2012. I can say that even amidst the
tears and pain of that event, I was never so moved by the passion and concern
of students for one another and for their wider community. It was a time when
hundreds of students of conscience, the majority students of color, rose up and
led us all to think together about what it means to be Christians in the face
of racism, fear, and willful ignorance. It was a pivotal event for many on this
campus in thinking about our mission as a college and it demonstrated the power
of students to affect change.
Nevertheless, Danny is absolutely right when he says that then,
as now, the response of many White students was defensiveness, bewilderment,
and denial. For the 13 years I’ve taught
at Wheaton, I’ve had a front row seat to this.
Generations of students have faced similar frustrations in an
institution with a relatively homogeneous constituency, who are notoriously
blind to issues of culture, structure, race, and history. Each year, we welcome
a new crop of earnest, bright young students who bring with them the same
baggage of White racism and privileged perspective that the classes before them
have brought. Change is slow.
For that reason, it is no surprise that many of you who have
commented on Danny’s post have noted that it resonated with your experience as
well. I wish it weren’t the case that this experience were so common, but we
can all be grateful to Danny for putting together his years of thinking and
work in one place, alongside the incontrovertible and painful evidence, so that
we can continue to demonstrate the important and undeniable problems that exist
at Wheaton.
At the same time, I hope that you will not lose the sight of
the hope that is in Danny’s post. He has
strong words for Wheaton’s leadership, but ultimately he calls not for
withdrawal, but for engagement and change.
In other words, in the face of this cultural and structural evil…
lean in.
Push us. Demand action. Be involved. Lean in.
Though the pace of change at Wheaton is too often confoundingly
slow; though there is frequently more
rhetoric than action; it is true that people who speak out forcefully are sometimes
made to feel disloyal, irresponsible, or unchristian. At the same time, there
are good things happening at Wheaton that are not merely window dressing. God
is not silent and there are signs of God’s redemption even at Wheaton.
Some of these changes may be the result of demography. The
fact is that the United States will be a majority
minority country in perhaps 30 years or less. Latino/as are the fastest
growing population, a community with a strong Christian contingent. Wheaton would be foolish to ignore this
change, and, in fact, we are not.
Some of this change may be the result of a younger
leadership in among the trustees and senior administration who are more aware
and connected to diverse communities.
Our current President, Phil
Ryken, is in his fourth year at Wheaton, and has made deepening
ethnic diversity one of his top priorities.
Some is the result of innovative and inspiring students,
like Vince, Veronica, Irma, Rachel, and so so so many others who have had
brilliant ideas and pushed them into reality. (The B.R.I.D.G.E.
program was one such dream cum
reality.)
All of it is, unquestionably, the movement of the Holy
Spirit bringing shalom through his faithful servants, servants like Danny who
are willing to speak, brashly even, to motivate and inspire greater
faithfulness from us all.
It is my hope – my prayer – that those who believe in the
vision of Wheaton, the idea of this place that is too rarely realized in the
living, will not abandon us, but lean in to the opportunity to push it further
in the right direction.
Here are some concrete things you can do as alumni, future
alumni, and current students that can bring these changes to campus and make
Wheaton a more accessible place for everyone.
- Come back to campus for alumni events and meet with senior leaders. Tell them what your priorities are and how you would like to see Wheaton reflect those.
- Take Danny’s suggestion to pool your resources to support initiatives that matter to you. (How amazing would it be to have the Adeline Collins Chair of Women’s Studies [first woman to graduate from Wheaton, 1870] or the Edward B. Seller’s Institute of African and African American Christian Studies [first man of African descent to graduate from Wheaton in 1866]).
- Organize the Wheaton Alumni of Color Network to push Wheaton to realize a truer vision of what it means to be a Christian community that actively works against White racism in all its forms.
I, along with so many of my colleagues – your current and
former faculty and staff - will continue to work with, and sometimes against,
those at Wheaton who may not feel the urgency for change that Danny has
articulated here. We’re in this. We hope you will be, too.
Those who have been away for years, even decades, you are
welcomed to come back and see the ways Wheaton has (as well as the ways it has
not yet) grown in becoming a more diverse and inclusive community.
Those of you who have been here more
recently, I encourage you to take Danny’s energetic call as a reason to stay
involved and be connected.
The vision that gave rise to Wheaton, rooted in
abolitionism, gender equality, and engaged Christianity has wavered in its
history, but the dream is not dead. There are good reasons to be hopeful.
Stay with us. God honors the brave. But most of all, God is with those who stand for righteousness in love. Stand with us.
Humbly,
Brian Howell
Associate Professor of Anthropology
10 comments:
Counseling patience is a time-honored way of excusing unwillingness or incompetence. You are right that it's people who care about Wheaton that should "lean-in" but the problem (for Wheaton) is that group is getting smaller and smaller. With good reason.
Oh, I definitely do not want to be seen as counseling patience! No, I think we've had enough patience. Rather, I am counseling hopefulness. I don't believe the group of people of color who care about and/or are associated with Wheaton is getting smaller. Certainly among the faculty it is at the largest in our history. Wheaton is not what it should be, or could be, but I don't think we can honestly say that it is getting worse.
I agree more people on campus are aware there are issues to be addressed, but the community as a whole is DECADES behind the curve and throwing the same tired forums/committees/earnest town halls/breathless public apologies/short-term admissions strategies at the problem. Those without a vested interest in the school (like Danny) have stopped wondering if dear Wheaton can turn it around this time. Wheaton should thank their stars that someone like Danny still has the give-a-damn to speak out at all.
That's just it; we've got more going on now than just forums and public apologies. I won't go through all the responses again, because I don't want to seem that I'm defending what is a problem, but I don't think being "behind the curve" is the big problem. The problem is lack of forward motion. But given that we ARE moving forward, we can say that things are getting better and we should be hopeful, not discouraged.
Brian, thank you for an excellent post!
Fantastic words - thank you for penning this, Dr. Howell!
Thank you for your post Dr. Howell. Praise God that President Ryken has made the issue of deepening ethnic diversity a top priority. My prayer is that as students, alumni, and otherwise rise to support his efforts, that the administration at large continues to follow suit. It is wonderful to hear about the progress already made with the BRIDGE program!
The truth it that for many alumni of color, scars that were covered in biblical language remain fresh despite decades of separation. The mere mention of this incident reinforces the notion that after almost 20 years, the menacing ugliness we all experienced, often just under the surface, is still alive and well. The fact that the world after Wheaton has been kinder to many of us, and larger secular institutions of higher learning more accepting, makes it difficult for many of us to ever want to engage in this tired conversation at this institution yet again.
The truth it that for many alumni of color, scars that were covered in biblical language remain fresh despite decades of separation. To even hear of this incident reinforces the notion that after almost 20 years, the menacing ugliness we all experienced, often just under the surface, is still alive and well. The fact that the world after Wheaton has been kinder to many of us, and larger secular institutions of higher learning more accepting, makes it difficult for many of us to ever want to engage in this tired conversation at this institution yet again.
First of all, I would like to thank you for this meaningful post. Wheaton has a unique roll within the broader evangelical movement in this country, and if it can really move to take action on these topics, I hope and pray that it can be a beacon for others to do the same.
The one concern that I have with your post, and this comes from living and teaching within the African-American community for a number of years, is the term "white racism." I understand the historic issues surrounding this, but racism exists in all people groups, even those who have had to endure horrific deeds and words at the hands of whites. This may come across as defensive- I pray that it does not. In no way am I trying to say that whites should get a pass just because other people show discrimination, but neither should anyone else. If we are truly building a beloved community "For Christ and His Kingdom," then we all have to recognize the sin that infects us without negating the institutional and structural issues that must be dealt with as well.
That said, I am praying with you and others that Wheaton would see a spiritual awakening around these issues.
Coram Deo
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