Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Discussion Exposes Rose Students To Question Of What Is 'Race?'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Discussion Exposes Rose Students To Question Of What Is 'Race?'

    DISCUSSION EXPOSES ROSE STUDENTS TO QUESTION OF WHAT IS 'RACE?'
    By Joanne Hammer

    Terre Haute Tribune Star, IN
    April 5 2006

    About 50 students and faculty who attended a documentary and discussion
    at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology learned that what people
    perceive as "race" may, in reality, be a social perception.

    The group watched the final segment Tuesday in "Race: The Power of
    an Illusion," a three-part documentary produced by California Newsreel.

    "How do you define 'white'?" asked the group's facilitator, Ella
    Ingram, Rose-Hulman assistant professor of biology. "What is white -
    or what is non-white, that is the question."

    The film portrayed how race was embedded into the nation's politics
    and economics.

    In the 1930s, government officials used a national appraisal system
    in which race was a factor in real estate, according to the film. As
    a result, the government gave the lowest rating to communities that
    were all minority or were in the process of becoming integrated.

    After the film, some students had personal examples of how those
    considered "white" had an advantage over other races.

    Because the color black has a negative preconception, people think
    "black is bad," said Sean Durrant, a student from Jamaica. "Those
    with lighter-colored skin have an inherent advantage."

    The documentary showed a black World War II soldier who came home,
    excited to build a new life - when he was told he could not buy a
    home in a certain neighborhood because he was black.

    Students also were exposed to the question of what is "race."

    According to the film, in 1909, a U.S. Court of Appeals ruled that
    Armenians were legally white. But in 1922, when Japanese businessman
    Takao Ozawa petitioned to become a naturalized citizen, he was denied
    because he was "not white within the meaning of the statute," according
    to the film.

    "Everything they worked for was just all taken away," said student
    Jim Sedoff, during the discussion.

    During the time of racial segregation and Jim Crow laws, courts wanted
    to decide who was black. Different states had different rules about
    the percentage of ancestry and a person could cross state lines and
    legally change race, according to the film.

    "They make so much effort to define something when it is really
    political," said student Anita Isch.

    Facilitating such discussions allow students to learn about different
    ethnic backgrounds of students and people they may work with in
    the future.

    "It's a comfortable and safe environment," said Karen DeGrange,
    director or International Student Services.

    The end of the film posed a question that startled some students and
    raised the issue of personal responsibility: What can you do to make
    a more equitable environment?

    Joanne Hammer can be reached at (812) 231-4214 or
    [email protected].
Working...
X