Author Topic: OMFG-Georgetown University-preferential status in admissions to slave relatives  (Read 1362 times)

The True Adonis

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You can't make this shit up.  Liberals are insane at this point.  The Fogartys are really fucking things up.

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/02/us/slaves-georgetown-university.html

Georgetown University Plans Steps to Atone for Slave Past

By RACHEL L. SWARNSSEPT. 1, 2016

Photo
Georgetown University in Washington, seen from across the Potomac River. The institution came under fire last fall, with students demanding justice for the slaves in the 1838 sale. Credit Gabriella Demczuk for The New York Times

Nearly two centuries after Georgetown University profited from the sale of 272 slaves, it will embark on a series of steps to atone for the past, including awarding preferential status in the admissions process to descendants of the enslaved, officials said on Wednesday.

Georgetown’s president, John J. DeGioia, who will discuss the measures in a speech on Thursday afternoon, also plans to offer a formal apology, create an institute for the study of slavery and erect a public memorial to the slaves whose labor benefited the institution, including those who were sold in 1838 to help keep the university afloat.

In addition, two campus buildings will be renamed — one for an enslaved African-American man and the other for an African-American educator who belonged to a Catholic religious order.


So far, Mr. DeGioia’s plan does not include a provision for offering scholarships to descendants, a possibility that was raised by a university committee whose recommendations were released on Thursday morning. The committee, however, stopped short of calling on the university to provide such financial assistance, as well as admissions preference.

Mr. DeGioa’s decision to offer an advantage in admissions to descendants, similar to that offered to the children and grandchildren of alumni, is unprecedented, historians say. The preference will be offered to the descendants of all the slaves whose labor benefited Georgetown, not just the men, women and children sold in 1838.

More than a dozen universities — including Brown, Harvard and the University of Virginia — have publicly recognized their ties to slavery and the slave trade. But Craig Steven Wilder and Alfred L. Brophy, two historians who have studied universities and slavery, said they knew of none that had offered preferential status in admissions to the descendants of slaves.

Professor Wilder, of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said Mr. DeGioia’s plans to address Georgetown’s history go beyond any initiatives enacted by a university in the past 10 years.
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“It goes farther than just about any institution,” he said. “I think it’s to Georgetown’s credit. It’s taking steps that a lot of universities have been reluctant to take.”
Document: Georgetown University Working Group on Slavery Memory and Reconciliation Report

But whether the initiatives result in meaningful change remains to be seen, he said. Professor Wilder cautioned that the significance of the preferential status in admissions would rest heavily on the degree to which Georgetown invested in outreach to descendants, including identifying them, making sure they are aware of the benefit’s existence and actively recruiting them to the university.

“The question of how effective or meaningful this is going to be will only be answered over time,” Professor Wilder said.

Mr. DeGioia’s plan, which builds on the recommendations of the committee that he convened last year, represents the university’s first systematic effort to address its roots in slavery. Georgetown, which was founded and run by Jesuit priests in 1789, relied on the Jesuit plantations in Maryland — and the sale of produce and slaves — to finance its operations.

The 1838 sale, worth about $3.3 million in today’s dollars, was organized by two of Georgetown’s early presidents, both Jesuits. A portion of the profit, about $500,000, was used to help pay off Georgetown’s debts at a time when the college was struggling financially. The slaves were uprooted from the Maryland plantations and shipped to estates in Louisiana.

Mr. DeGioia said he planned to apologize for the wrongs of the past “within the framework of the Catholic tradition,” by offering what he described as a Mass of reconciliation in partnership with the Jesuit leadership in the United States and the Archdiocese of Washington.

“We know we’ve got work to do, and we’re going to take those steps to do so,” Mr. DeGioia said in an interview on Wednesday.

The two buildings being renamed originally paid tribute to the Rev. Thomas F. Mulledy and the Rev. William McSherry, the college presidents involved in the 1838 sale. Now one will be called Isaac Hall to commemorate the life of Isaac, one of the slaves shipped to Louisiana in 1838, and the other Anne Marie Becraft Hall, in honor of a 19th-century educator who founded a school for black girls in Washington.

“It needs to be a part of our living history,” Mr. DeGioia said.

Mr. DeGioia assembled his working group of scholars, administrators, students and alumni last September, asking them to consider how the university should address its history. Their work took on greater urgency in November in the wake of student demonstrations. In April, The New York Times published an article tracing the life of one of the slaves, Cornelius Hawkins, and his modern-day descendants.
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In its 102-page report, the committee said that the university’s dependence on slavery was deeper and broader than originally believed.

Slave labor and slave sales were envisioned as part of the financing model of the college even before the doors opened in 1789. And slaves were not only forced to work on the Jesuit plantations. Some also toiled on campus, hired from students and other wealthy people.

The committee said that it was likely that all of the earliest buildings on campus — including the ones named for the university leaders who orchestrated the 1838 sale — were built with slave labor.

More historical research needs to be done, the committee said, and that will be coordinated by the new research center, the Institute for the Study of Slavery and its Legacies. The university has already selected the program director for the institute, which will also support Mr. DeGioia’s plans to deepen engagement with descendants of the enslaved.

Mr. DeGioia, who met with dozens of descendants this summer, plans to establish a working group for the creation of the public memorial that will include descendants. He also plans, among other efforts, to provide descendants with access to genealogical information housed in the university’s archives.

“All of these will have a substantial financial impact,” said Mr. DeGioia, who believes that Georgetown’s philanthropic community will support his initiatives. “I’m very confident that will not be a constraint.”

Karran Harper Royal, a descendant of slaves sold in 1838, said that she appreciated the decision to rename the buildings and to create a memorial. But she said the initiatives fell far short of what descendants had hoped for.

She said that Georgetown should have offered scholarships to descendants and included them on the committee that developed the recommendations, adding that she and others “felt the sting” of not being formally invited to Mr. DeGioia’s speech this afternoon.

“It has to go much farther,” said Ms. Harper Royal, who is an organizer of a group of descendants. “They’re calling us family. Well, I’m from New Orleans and when we have a gathering, family’s invited.”

The True Adonis

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What a fucking joke. 

mass243

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I might actually apply.

Fortress

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World's nuts.

LMV

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 how much does he bench?

moty

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After the whole "safe spaces" thing and numerous other examples of cuckoldry does something like this really surprise you? It honestly seems pretty tame for the liberal agenda.

timfogarty

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as it state:

"The preference will be offered to the descendants of all the slaves whose labor benefited Georgetown, not just the men, women and children sold in 1838."

All the descendants of slave labor that was used to build or maintain Georgetown University. 

calfzilla

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If they actually cared about slaves they would do something to help the slaves that exist today in several countries. They most likely all have several clothing items that were made by slaves, do they not care about that?

The True Adonis

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If they actually cared about slaves they would do something to help the slaves that exist today in several countries. They most likely all have several clothing items that were made by slaves, do they not care about that?
Liberals are just fine with slavery in the middle east.  In fact, they even have a word for it- "cultural relativity".

Pathetic.

timfogarty

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Liberals are just fine with slavery in the middle east.  In fact, they even have a word for it- "cultural relativity".

don't know where you come up with these terms.  While there are Democrats who are pro business and somewhat anti labor, I don't see how you can say liberals are not concerned about forced labor today. 

Are you telling me these are conservative websites?

http://www.endslaverynow.org/learn/slavery-today/forced-labor

http://www.antislavery.org/english/slavery_today/forced_labour/

http://www.ilo.org/global/topics/forced-labour/lang--en/index.htm

The True Adonis

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don't know where you come up with these terms.  While there are Democrats who are pro business and somewhat anti labor, I don't see how you can say liberals are not concerned about forced labor today. 

Are you telling me these are conservative websites?

http://www.endslaverynow.org/learn/slavery-today/forced-labor

http://www.antislavery.org/english/slavery_today/forced_labour/

http://www.ilo.org/global/topics/forced-labour/lang--en/index.htm
I am talking about the ones who think women in Burkas is acceptable and the religion and cultures that support that should not be criticized or stopped.

Tapeworm

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It's a private institution.  It can be as silly as it pleases.  And it do.


Direct Expenses1   Freshmen   Continuing
Full-Time Tuition2   $49,968   $49,968
Yates Fee   $420   $420
Average Class Fees   $180   $181
Activity Fee   $159   $159
New Student Orientation (NSO)   $237   n/a
Average Room & Board3   $14,962   $15,568
Indirect Expenses1       
Average Books   $1,200   $1,200
Average Personal Expenses   $1,954   $1,954
Average Travel   $650   $650
Average Federal Direct Loan Fee   $40   $40
Totals   $69,770   $70,140

Are you kidding me?  "Oh did you need a loan for that?"  They're still in the slave binness.

Irongrip400

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I saw this on BBC earlier. There is a cultural and political shift happening in this country. It's not in our favor. It will be bad for whites a few generations for now. The minorities will never "forget"...

Deacon Jeschin

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Simple solution:  Don't attend school there.

This college will then turn into a gimmick college like Howard.

A Howard University degree keeps office shredders working each and every day.