U Of I Students Gather In Solidarity With Mizzou
The U of I's rally is one of many across the country in solidarity with the University of Missouri students, whose protests against racism spurred the resignation of Mizzou’s president and other school officials last week.
More than 100 U of I students from various black student groups took to the main quad to share their experiences with racism on campus and in the community.
Ronald Lewis, a junior at the university, says the issue of racism is widespread on college campuses.
“There is a system of just… oppression at this campus, and as much as people who don’t look like us don’t want to say it, I mean it is. Just because you hear it at a different university, we shouldn’t try to say it doesn’t happen here, because it does.”
Organizers say they aren’t making demands of the school. Rather, they wanted black students to come together and realize their own strength on the U of I campus.
Links
- What #BlackLivesMatter Means One Year Later
- Remembering My Sister, Sandy
- U of I Report Details Episodes Of Racial Microaggressions
- SPLC Finds 21 Active Hate Groups In Illinois
- HATE CRIMES AND EXTREMISM IN THE UNITED STATES
- Taking Responsibility of Institutional Racism
- Academic Racism
- What Being Black in Ukraine Taught Me About Racism in the United States