In a viral video that has unfold on social media, a white feminine pupil is recorded calling a Black male pupil the N-word at a Henry County, Georgia, highschool. The boy then proceeds to slap the lady.
“Racism in any form or kind isn’t okay,” Komisha Davis advised native information, guardian to a 15-year-old daughter that attends Locust Grove Excessive College, the place the incident occured.
“So that you can hear that your baby is just not secure at a spot you ship her to on daily basis, that’s devastating,” Davis mentioned.
The varsity was made conscious of the slap, prompting the male pupil to be punished whereas the white feminine who referred to as him the racial slur didn’t initially face any repercussions.
A senior at Locust Grove, Layla Moreau, and her pal organized a protest Thursday morning to deliver consciousness to the multitude of racist incidents Black college students expertise on the predominantly white highschool.
“I’ve been referred to as an N-word myself,” Moreau mentioned. “We determined to take motion in opposition to it as a result of this isn’t the primary time this has occurred at that faculty or a college in Henry County.
“It shouldn’t be two totally different therapies,” continued the highschool senior. “Give the identical therapy for everyone and never based mostly on their pores and skin shade.”
She is moreover organizing a program for Black college students to share their issues in a secure area on the college.
A spokesperson for Henry County Colleges mentioned in an announcement: “We had been made conscious of a matter involving a pupil utilizing extremely inappropriate/offensive and unacceptable language towards one other pupil, which then resulted in an altercation… College directors had been capable of meet with college students on Thursday in a really productive and constructive manner for college students to precise their emotions… Directors and workers stay accessible to hearken to and assist anybody who wants it.”
Davis shared that she’s contemplating transferring her daughter to a distinct college after the various racist occurrences which have come to gentle from Locust Grove.
“Make the children know that it’s okay to come back to high school and be taught and never need to be referred to as the N-word,” Davis mentioned.