In general, I am not a political person. I am not a rabble rouser. I avoid conflict and confrontation.
The majority of you who come here will likely be unfamiliar with the link I'm posting above. I rarely discuss my roots or much personal information, though some of you might know I grew up in California.
And I virtually never mention the fact that I am a graduate of Bob Jones University. The primary reason is explained in that link above.
To be honest, when I first applied to attend there and was accepted, I did not realize that the school's past was linked with segregational/racist policies. It wasn't immediately apparent there in campus life, either; it simply didn't come up all that often for me to consider seriously, and it didn't affect me personally. I'm just some white girl; nothing extraordinary about me.
Now, however, I look back at certain events that occurred during my time there (2 specific instances of "whites" being counseled/forbidden to date "Asians") and I grieve about this-- the damage done to the testimony of Jesus Christ and His Church. And I regret that I didn't have the boldness to stand up and say something at the time. As I mentioned in the first paragraph, I'm by nature a non-confrontational person--though that is not an excuse.
I didn't realize that the association of my college degree would carry over into my first job interview, post-graduation. I was applying for a teaching position at a Christian school, when the principal asked me what I thought about the school's celebrating Martin Luther King Day. I wasn't sure where this question was going, to be honest. I don't remember what I answered--though I am a big fan of just about any holiday off from school ;). What floored me and sickened me was the follow-up question: "What do you feel about having a black student in your class?" I stammered out a response; why should I care what color a kid is? They're all just people! But the name of the granting institution on my degree colored (hah) certain assumptions about me as a person.
No matter how many times I tried to say, "it wasn't like that, REALLY, it wasn't" - I would hear examples of old-school graduates who, sadly, WERE. My English teacher colleague/friend Claire Teague commented to me she'd never met a BJU graduate who was as laid-back as I and Jim Mailloux (another BJ grad and colleague @ the school) were about race/segregation. My elementary teacher colleague, who, upon hearing I attended Bob Jones, said, "Oh, he was the racist, right?" (She later came to me, weeping and apologetic if she had hurt my feelings. Judi, you don't need to apologize for anything.) My friend whose grandparents-in-law - BJU affiliated - disapproved of her marrying their grandson, because she is Asian.
It's grievous. It's a blight on those who name the name of Christ. It's a reproach.
So there is a call from the alumni and past students to the current administration to make things right. Be it known that I am a lifetime member of the Alumni Association, charged with keeping the school true to the Faith delivered once for all to the saints.
May the testimony of Christ shine forth clearly.
Edit: I am not posting this because I'm a disgruntled soul with an axe to grind. I am jealously watching out for the reputation of an institution that I have loved through the years, in hopes that wrongs can be made right.
Other alumni have been much more eloquent than I am in this instance, and if I knew how to do trackback things, I would.
Knock-knock
1 month ago
4 comments:
wow. there's no way i could have known you went there, but i am shocked to hear it. i would have probably judged you by that part of your resume too, honestly. i think its great you wrote the letter.
I'm sorry I wasn't perfectly clear, Karen-- I am linking to the letter and I have signed the letter, but the idea was not original with me.
Thanks for posting!
well, I knew, but I don't believe I ever judged you that way. :)
You know it's absurd really to think of Christians being uncomfortable with blacks or people of Asian origin when our Lord was from a Middle-Eastern country (right on the edge of Africa) and the Arabic region of Galilee at that (a despised area). I realise that David had red hair, so it isn't a given that an Isreali would have black hair and dark skin, but I reckon our Lord wasn't quite so white and blue-eyed as Western artists would have us believe. Nor as good looking if we are to believe Isaiah.
Indeed Abraham was from Mesopotamia modern day Iraq.
But you know all this chuck.
On a completely unrelated issue, my word verification is misbythe...nearly mrs blythe eh?
Hugs to you mi dearie.
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