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UK official urges 'segregated' Greeks to cooperate
Josey Montana McCoy
The Kentucky Kernel (The University of Kentucky) Issue date: 9/4/07 Section: Campus News Mahjabeen Rafiuddin wants to end the separation between black and white Greek communities at UK. "You can look at the way the Greek community is set up, and it is blatantly segregated," said Rafiuddin, the director of UK student diversity engagement. "Nobody questions why the black and white Greeks don't cooperate." Rafiuddin, who joined UK in November 2006, developed an Inter Greek Relations Project plan this summer aimed at bringing Greek leaders together for six roundtable discussions. The project - It's All Greek to Me - will challenge black and white sororities and fraternities to practice better cooperation. "Student leaders aren't inclusive," she said. "How do you bring together a group of exclusive people and ask them to be inclusive?" Separation of white and black Greek communities on campus begins at the top, Rafiuddin said. Each Greek organization has separate assistants who have graduated that oversee their community. The Interfraternity Council oversees white fraternities, the Panhellenic Council oversees white sororities and the National Pan-Hellenic Council oversees both black sororities and fraternities. Rafiuddin wants to see the leaders, along with student members, support and promote each other, while joining together more often for Greek events, she said. Kimber Hatton, a committee chair at Delta Sigma Theta, a historically black sorority, has volunteered two semesters with student diversity engagement and believes one person's initiative can spark a movement. "Greek relations are very big at UK and very influential," said Hatton, a junior nursing major. "I believe if (students) see black and white Greeks unite, then non-Greeks will also unite." more |
why did i read this as "United Kingdom"... :confused:
uugh. too early in the morning. coffee, PLEASE kick in. |
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The problem STARTS with whoever (meaning the person(s) who wrote/contributed to this article) is perpetuating the idea that NPC/IFC are the "white" GLOs. |
I don't suppose it's possible that they would just leave everybody the hell alone (?).
My large IFC chapter has maybe 8-10 black guys, but there's no doubt that we are culturally white. There's no doubt that the black fraternities are culturally black. We all - black and white fraternities and sororities - get along, and we're all very happy with who we are. I don't think anyone is overtly turned down for membership because of their race. Let people be happy and participate in the culture with which they most identify. Probably too much to ask for from the aggressive politically-correct crowd. |
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I did too, i was like, they don't have GLOs in the UK hehe :confused: :p |
Integration of UK GLO's
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Greeks at UK have traditionally been segregated. When I went through "rush" in 1976, one GLO closed that year because they pledged a black member and it split the house. I thought that things had changed along with the passage of time (30 years!!!!) but I see that it still has not. Greek membership has changed, though. Now there are no longer just IFC, NPC, and Divine Nine chapters to consider --there are GLO's for Hispanics, Asians, multi-cultural houses, houses based on sexual orientation, various religions. What it comes down to is this: the need for the fraternal spirit. Man was not meant to live alone. Man is a social animal. Fraternities and sororities fulfill this need. It might take another 30 years for UK to fully integrate its GLO's, no matter what this advisor suggests. The emphasis should be on membership within the environment that suits the individual. |
Somewhere on YouTube the DG's are stepping with the AKA's from somebody's university.
I just found that interesting... How come I reading this now and still thinking United Kingdom, too. :rolleyes: ETA: According to the US Supreme Court, there is no need for desegregation. |
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I laughed. And laughed and laughed. And laughed some more. I can't believe there was an award for inviting the black chicks to dinner. I'm going to invite the DC Dekes to our chapter house when the renovations are done and hope we get a mention in the Washington Post. Well, at least the Mini Page. |
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:: wouldve love to be a fly on that wall at that dinner :: |
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Consider it my unfamiliarity with UK.... my mom was offered a bid from Delta Zeta at at Ferris in the early 70s, but I can only assume Michigan and Kentucky were two entirely different climates. (Remember at her school the NPHCs rushed with the NPCs) |
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I think I have told you this, but neither Delta nor any other additional NPHC group were allowed to charter at SIUC, supposedly because there was no available housing. The AKAs, Kappas and Alphas were already on campus in housing. But soon they found the restrictions unbearable. It wasn't until Frankie Freeman, the first Black US Civil Rights Commissioner was invited to campus by the NPC (because she was a woman)to speak that Delta was allow to charter without a house. Why? She was our national president at the time and wore those folx out about the fact that her sorority wasn't represented at SIUC--(we were apart of SIUE's chapter.) That then opened the doors for the Ques, SGRhos (who were on campus, but i think were affiliated with SIUE or a St. Louis collegiate chapter,) Sigmas, and Zetas to charter without houses, as well as the exisiting BGLOs to move out of the campus-owned houses. |
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wow, interesting history. |
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Bottom line, it was pure and blatant racism, and the US Civil Rights Commissioner wasn't having it. P.S. she is from St. Louis and was a soror and good friend of my late Mom--that is how I got the scoop. It was pretty heady stuff for an 18 year old collegiate caught up in the Movement. :D |
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