
3 minute read
The Weekly
NAACP hosts Black Mary Washington: Past, Present and Future discussion panel of Black students and alumni
During his first year at UMW, class of 1996 alum Sye Smith had his first class taught by a Black professor: James Farmer.
“One of the last questions that he asked at the end of the semester was ... ‘Who in this classroom would say they would never practice racism?’” Sye said. “When I looked around the room at hands that didn’t look like mine, you saw every hand fly up in the room. And Dr. Farmer looked and told most of them, ‘Congratulations, you’ve just told your first lie.’” support system for men of color. the honor code by cheating.
Smith’s story was part of Black Mary Washington: Past, Present and Future, a panel discussion led by UMW’s NAACP on Feb. 6. The event consisted of Black UMW alumni and current students, ranging from the class of 1984 to the class of 2025, answering and asking questions about their experiences at UMW.
Maya Jenkins, a senior political science major and president of UMW NAACP, presented questions to the panel.
After touring the university, Jenkins came to UMW with idealized expectations of what college would be like.


“Then when I came here there was this shift in my mind, where an extremely traumatic racial incident happened before I even started my classes,” she said. “And then another thing happened during my classes and this kind of reality that I had, about how good Mary Washington is, kind of shifted. That doesn’t mean that I didn’t find joy—that I didn’t find beauty.” She credited the Black community at UMW that came before her for creating this beauty.
Multiple speakers recalled times in which they had experienced a hate crime.

Myca Lester, a sophomore sociology major and chair of the Radical Students’ Union, recalled a similar experience.
“I have had multiple challenges being here. In the middle of my freshman year I was the victim of a hate crime on campus,” she said. “There wasn’t necessarily a lot of support from administration regarding that, but then Dr. Shorter came along, love her. And she sort of helped be, not just administration support, but support as a Black woman.” Shavonne Shorter is the associate provost for equity and inclusion and the chief diversity officer.
“There were three Black students in this sociology class ... and somehow all three of us got accused of cheating,” he said.
The basis for the allegation was that their grades had improved “too much” between the midterm and final exams. Though Ford spoke about the situation with administrators and the accusations were ultimately dropped, the fact that the accused students were Black—the only Black students in the class—troubled him.

“I was seeing all these stories about people talking about Black people who exist at Mary Washington. I know when we come here, we be thinking like, ‘Am I the only person who’s experiencing these things? Like do these problems just happen to me?’ and it can be isolating,” she said. “These stories need to be told, not just for us, but so that future generations at Mary Washington know that there’s a playbook.”
“My four years at Mary Washington, I can give you the rosy picture and I can give you the dark picture,” said Smith. “Myself, I was the victim of a hate crime.” If he had retaliated, he said, he probably would have ended up in prison instead of finishing college.
Smith found support and solidarity through his membership with Brothers of a New Direction, a student organization at UMW that he played a role in establishing. The organization works to provide a

Kianna Davis, a class of 2013 alum with a degree in business, came to UMW with a full scholarship, which she tried to hide to avoid racist remarks from her peers.
“A lot of people would come up to me like, ‘Oh you only got that scholarship because you’re Black,’” she said. “That was really rough for me because it was like people diminishing my accomplishments to my skin color.”
Jason Ford graduated in 2020 with a degree in political science. During the summer after his sophomore year, he received an email saying he had violated
“It was a weak argument, but what kind of shook me was the potential outcome of suspension or expulsion from the university,” he said. “It was definitely one of those times where I was like, ‘Why is this the accusations you’re making?’ And all three of the Black students got accused, it didn’t make any sense, at least the three Black males.”
Lester spoke on what helped her feel more comfortable at a predominantly white institution.
“I was a peer mentor and that really helped me, especially because three or four of my mentees, they were Black,” she said. “I started helping them navigate being a Black person at a PWI.”
Greta Franklin Okomo, a class of 2000 alum with a degree in art history, said she was greatly impacted by the Women of Color organization at UMW.
Thursday, February 9, 2023
