Students in Charlottesville March, Call for Change at the University | Sojourners

Students in Charlottesville March, Call for Change at the University

Students attend the March to Reclaim Our Grounds. Photo by Kaylah Jackson / Medill News Service

CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — Instead of preparing for the first day of school Tuesday, several hundred students at the University of Virginia spent Monday night rallying to call for more racial diversity at the school and to highlight its history of discrimination.

The “March to Reclaim Our Grounds” was in response to the white nationalist rally and violent demonstrations earlier this month that culminated in the death of Heather Heyer, 32, when a white nationalist plowed his car into the crowd of counter-protesters.

Thousands gathered on campus for an unannounced candlelight vigil on Wednesday, but student leaders said the vigil didn’t address the school’s history of inequality or its current problems.

“We’ve come too far to turn back now,” Danyelle Honoré, NAACP student chapter president, told the crowd Monday night. “It’s not about organization. It’s about coming together to achieve equality and freedom. I am tired of it. It is not the time for us to be content with the little bit of freedom that we do have.”

Lisa Green, a founder of the LGBTQ advocacy group Cville Pride, said white students need to join with students of color in the fight for equality.

“White people, wake up,” Green said. “We have to do more. We must start picking each other up. Our people of color cannot carry this by themselves any longer. It is time for us to hold ourselves accountable.”

On a stage in the center of campus, student leaders read a list of demands as UVA President Teresa Sullivan listened. Among the demands:

  • Declare the lawn a residential space. Concealed arms and open flames should not be allowed within this space.
  • White supremacist hate groups, particularly UVA alumni Jason Kessleer and Richard Spencer should be explicitly denounced and banned from campus. They have already incited and perpetrated violence against students past the point of free speech.
  • Expand the working group on University response to events of August 11-12, 2017 to represent students of color and those affected by the violence of August 11-12.

The full list of demands can be found on “March to Reclaim Our Grounds” Facebook.

“I don’t want people to walk around here clueless anymore,” Black Student Alliance Secretary Devin Willis, a second-year student, said. “I don’t want people to think that a passive attitude about race will fix white supremacy and the issues it causes. So many people are afraid to take ownership of their complicity in the matter.”

At UVA, a public university, 6.4 percent of the 22,000 students were African American in the 2016 academic year and only 3 percent of the faculty members were African Americans. The minority groups on campus are demanding the university to take action to increase both percentages to improve diversity on campus.

“I felt like since the university was built on my backs of my ancestors, it’s my duty to be there right now,” said Brianna Eaddy, a third-year student and Richmond, Va., native. “I felt like UVA needs to call out the white supremacy. They need to acknowledge that the school was built on the backs of slaves. To change everything by meeting the demands of the BSA and other groups.”

One of those demands is for the university to remove Confederate plaques from central display and move them into a museum.

“Whose grounds? Our grounds,” students chanted as they marched to the Rotunda North Plaza, where a statue of the school’s founder and slave owner, Thomas Jefferson, is located.