The oak tree where nooses were hung at the Jena High School campus in the Fall of 2006 no longer stands. It was chopped down, presumably in an effort to erase racial tension in the small Louisiana town of Jena.
The school’s main academic building is also gone, destroyed by an arson that has raised questions about a possible link to the racial discord.
What remains in the predominately white, rural town are legal battles involving black students who have become known internationally as the “Jena Six.” They are accused of beating a white student at the climax of a period of racial tension sparked by the noose hanging. Five of the students were initially charged as adults with attempted second-degree murder and conspiracy; the sixth was charged as a juvenile.
Advocates at the Southern Poverty Law Center and elsewhere, though recognizing clearly that violence is never an acceptable solution to racial tensions, argue that charges against the black students were disproportionate to the actual offense and that their race played a factor in the charges levied. Others disagree.
But, what educators must never forget is this: Had school officials in Jena paid closer attention to racial divisions on campus, addressed the noose-hanging incident properly and kept tensions from escalating, the beating may never have happened at all.
Six Lessons from Jena Every School and Educator Should Take to Heart
by Jennifer Holladay
1 Don’t ignore obvious signs of trouble
In Jena, a black student approached a viceprincipal
and asked, “Can we sit under that tree?’”
On campus, it was known as the “White Tree” — a
place where white students historically gathered. The
principal said people could sit wherever they liked. It
was an appropriate response, yet one that overlooked
the core issue: Why did students feel like they needed
to ask for permission? What did the very question
reveal about the school’s racial climate?
2 Examine your school’s climate
You may think your school is “no Jena High”
— but do you know for sure? Are there divisions
about which you’re unaware?
In a survey conducted in 2005 by Teaching Tolerance,
the National Education Association and the Civil Rights
Project, the vast majority of teachers nationally said their
schools were largely free of racial or ethnic tensions.
Students, however, paint a very different picture.
One in four report being victimized in racial or ethnic
incidents in a typical school year, and race and
ethnicity aren’t the only lines of division, either. Seventy
percent of female students say they’ve been sexually
harassed at school; 75 percent of gay students report
hearing anti-gay slurs frequently or often at school, and
more than a third say they’ve been physically harassed.*
3 Take bias incidents seriously
After a few black students sat under the
“White Tree,” three white students hung nooses from
it. Jena’s white school superintendent, Roy Breithaupt,
later told the Chicago Tribune, “Adolescents play
pranks. I don’t think it was a threat against anybody.”
In truth, the hanging of nooses was no youthful prank;
it was a bias incident connoting racial lynchings. As
Caseplia Bailey, whose son Robert is among the Jena
Six, told Britain’s Observer, the act “meant the KKK,
it meant … ‘We’re going to kill you, we’re gonna’ hang
you ‘til you die.’”
By their very nature, bias incidents intend to demean
or instill fear in those targeted, and schools must
address them quickly, consistently and effectively.
4 Provide forums for meaningful discussion
When bias incidents occur, schools must open
lines of communication, not shut down debate. In Jena:
• After black students gathered around the “White
Tree” to protest the school’s response to the noosehanging,
the principal called a school assembly and
told students it was time to put the incident behind
them. The district attorney spoke next, flanked by
police officers, warning students: “With a stroke of my
pen, I can make your lives disappear” — the equivalent
of throwing gasoline on a fire.
• When black parents showed up at a school board
meeting, they were not allowed to speak. When
they showed up again, board members allowed a
spokesperson to address them, but then quickly
moved on to other business without addressing the
parents’ concerns.
In highly charged bias incidents, schools should
hold forums for educators, students, parents and
community members and issue regular updates about
the incident, describing what happened, why the
incident was unacceptable and how the school has
responded thus far. Schools should seek input about
ways the school, students, parents and community can
work together to resolve the underlying problems.
5 Use bias incidents as teachable moments
Ask teachers to set aside class time to allow
students to reflect on what has happened. Because
students can influence peer behavior, ask them to write
down suggestions for preventing further incidents and
promoting respect and to discuss their suggestions in
small groups. Because bias incidents often involve the use
of bigoted speech (slurs or epithets), conduct lessons to
empower students to make respectful language choices.
6 Bridge divisions in the school —
and the community
Organize school-wide events to help students cross
the boundaries that may divide them and learn about
respectful behavior. Teaching Tolerance’s Mix It Up [1]
program and No Name-Calling
Week [2] are excellent initiatives with which to start.
Schools don’t exist in isolation, however. If tensions
exist in a school, they probably exist in the larger
community, too. Whether through structured dialogue
programs like those offered by the Study Circles
Resource Center [3] or other social
justice programs, like the Department of Justice’s
Community Relations Service [4], the events in Jena serve as call to each of us to
explore what divides us — and what can unite us.
* See U.S. Department of Education, “Protecting Students from Harassment and Hate Crime: A Guide for Schools [5],” and Gay, Lesbian, Straight Education Network, “2005 National School Climate Survey [6]”
Links:
[1] http://www.mixitup.org
[2] http://www.nonamecallingweek.org
[3] http://www.studycircles.org
[4] http://www.usdoj.gov/ crs/
[5] http://www.ed.gov/offices/OCR/ archives/Harassment/harass_intro.html
[6] http://www.glsen.org/ cgi-bin/iowa/all/library/record/1927.html
[7] http://www.tolerance.org/sites/default/files/general/tt_lessons_from_jena.pdf
[8] http://www.tolerance.org/sites/default/files/general/School Climate Questionnaire.pdf