Parents are demanding action and answers from school officials after their Black children received handmade cards with what parents are calling racist language in a sixth-grade class at Pepper Tree Elementary School in Upland, California, this month.
The series of drawings read “You’re my favorite monkey” and “To my favorite cotton picker.”
According to KTLA 5 News, a mother of a Pepper Tree Elementary student said that she pulled her daughter from the school after continued harassment and little action from the Upland Unified School District.
Maylana and Rome Douglass, parents of three children that attend the school, told KTLA 5 News that their 12-year-old daughter has also received harassment from other sixth-grade students.
“They said that they were going to give her (a drawing) that specifically said, ‘You’re my favorite slave,’ and they were going to show her as a slave hanging from a tree,” said Maylana Douglas to KTLA.
In addition, Rome Douglas stated that a group of girls at the San Bernardino County school told his daughter that they would give her back massages since it’s Black History Month.
“It’s your month, you’re entitled to back rubs,” Rome Douglas said the girls told his daughter. “And apparently, someone told her, ‘Well, maybe only half the month because you’re only half Black.”
In addition, their son has told them that other students made monkey noises towards him as he pass through the hallway.
“I’ve pulled them out until we feel it’s safe,” said Maylana and Rome Douglas.
The president of the Parent-Teacher Association Robin Allen released a statement to the school district in support of the students that were targeted:
“I’m hoping that the district does not brush this under the rug as they’ve brushed issues under the rug in the past,” she said. “We want to know what zero-tolerance means. This is not the first time a situation like this has…
Read the full article here