Photo: Marvin Joseph/The Washington Post via Getty

GtownSlaves

More than 2,500 students at Georgetown University made their voices heard to create a reparations fund.

The fund would support education and health care programs in Louisiana and Maryland, “where many of 4,000 known living descendants of the 272 enslaved people now live,” according to theNew York Times, which also reported that, at the time, the college “relied on Jesuit-owned plantations in Maryland that were no longer producing a reliable income to support it.”

“The Jesuits sold my family and 40 other families so you could be here,” sophomore Melisande Short-Colomb said during a recent town hall to discuss the issue, according to ABC News. “No one in this room was here in 1838 when this happened.”

Short-Colomb is one of four students currently attending Georgetown under an admissions policy that recognizes the descendants of the 272 slaves as “legacy” students.

GtownSlaves

Todd Olson, vice president for student affairs at Georgetown, said the university has been working to address its historical relationship to slavery since 2015.

“The Descendant Community, the Society of Jesus, and Georgetown are working together towards reconciliation and transformation regarding the legacy of slavery,” Olson said in astatement.

“The process is anchored in the practice of trust-building, truth-telling, racial healing, and transformation. We have committed to finding ways that members of the Georgetown and Descendant communities can be engaged together in efforts that advance racial justice and enable every member of our Georgetown community to confront and engage with Georgetown’s history with slavery,” Olson said.

“Any student referendum provides a sense of the student body’s views on an issue. Student referendums help to express important student perspectives but do not create university policy and are not binding on the university,” he continued. “We remain committed to working with students — regardless of the outcome of the referendum — to develop education and programming that will enable all students to meaningfully engage with Georgetown’s history of slavery and support opportunities for collaboration between students and Descendants.”

In 2016, Georgetown agreed to give admissions preference to the descendants of 272 slaves. In addition, the school “formally apologized for its role in slavery” and “renamed two buildings on campus to acknowledge the lives of slaves,” theTimesreported.

source: people.com