Reed College Magazine June 2021

Page 26

“ WHAT HAVE WE BEEN THROUGH?” Alumni of color look back on life at a predominantly white institution through the lens of the ongoing civil rights movement

BY BRANDON ZERO ’11 AND CHRIS LYDGATE ’90

Alumni panelists spanning nearly two decades of graduating classes assembled for the college’s inaugural Race & Reconciliation summit in February. On the docket? Reflecting on the challenges of the past and confronting the vestiges of racism that linger today. Chair of the diversity & inclusion committee of the alumni board, alea adigweme ’06, convened the panel via Zoom to share memories, highlight victories, and steer the way forward.

Among the most contentious topics were how to navigate a campus social structure oblivious to white supremacy and whether panelists support the college going forward. The group was united in their ambivalence about their social experience on campus. “In my small circle, I felt connected,” said Yuka Nagashima ’92. “But I never had the expectation that I would feel included. Now I realize that’s sad.” Austin Campbell ’11 and his friends—including people of color and white allies—ran for various offices during his student years, responding to lack of progress on racial issues by reaching for power. Runs at Honor Council, Senate, and his own stint as Vice President proved helpful to the creation of a diversity statement in 2009, he said. Victories aside, the conditions that made them necessary stung.

“When I left Reed, I got on a train and was like, ‘See you never,’” Campbell said. “I felt like I tried to make change and got pushback. But I also formed a lot of strong relationships with other students of color.” Alumni of color reflecting on their time at Reed do so from a high vantage point. A year into the largest civil rights movement of our time, the fruits of student-led protests are too numerous to enumerate. Dedicated mental health counselors with specialties in Black health? The college’s hiring process is underway. Paid student positions for the Multicultural Resource Center and Black Student Union? Check, and Check. Designate campus as a sanctuary from immigrations and customs agents? Checkmate. President Kroger published a letter of support for Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals in 2016 and noted the college will not cooperate with federal deportation investigations. Reedies Against Racism and predecessor groups have secured many of their demands since regular occupations of Hum 110 lectures began in the fall of 2016.

1997 2004 2011 2012 2014 2015 2016 Nooses and graffiti targeting a Black professor spur debate on equity. Ad-hoc committee on diversity formed.

Graham Jones ’97 becomes first Black student body president. He is one of only 7 Black students at Reed.

24 Reed Magazine  june 2021

Students found DIY-ALANA (for do-it-yourself African American, Latinx, and Native American Studies) and invite professors to give lectures on subjects such as the Harlem Renaissance.

Prof. Crystal Williams [English] becomes first Dean for Institutional Diversity.

Milyon Trulove becomes Reed’s first Black dean of admission.

Civil-rights leader Kathleen Saadat ’74 issues stirring challenge at Commencement. “You must look for places where humanity will be served by deconstructing structures that harm people. And you must help to create new structures. It’s easier to tear it down than to build it back up.”

Reedies Against Racism (RAR) begins series of demonstrations and protests.

President Kroger reaffirms longstanding policy and declares Reed a santuary college— one of the key RAR demands.


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