I was eleven years old when I learned a new word – Bakke. I wasn’t sure what it was – a person or a disease. My parents angrily hurled the word out of their mouths like a venom: “Bakke, Bakke, Bakke”.
They acted as if their world had changed overnight. And perhaps it had. It was June 28, 1978, and the US. Supreme Court declared affirmative action constitutional, but invalidated the use of racial quotas.
I was too young to really understand the level of concern in their voices through the next days and weeks, as I heard other words, like quotas, diversity, opportunity, affirmative action, and racism.
Overtime, especially in law school, I learned more about Allan Bakke. He was an engineer working at a NASA lab and a former Marine who was 32 when he completed pre-med requirements at night, applied to Davis and was refused for two years running. Believing he would have qualified had Davis not reserved 16 of its 100 places for minority candidates, he sued as a victim of discrimination.
In June, 1978, the court affirmed the principle of affirmative action, endorsing those programs that made race only one of many factors to consider while prohibiting strict quota systems like Davis’. And it ordered the school to admit Bakke.
Bakke entered that fall at 38. He was greeted by demonstrations, dogged by criticism and kept to himself. After graduating in 1982, he took his residency at the Mayo Clinic and worked as an anesthesiologist in Rochester, Minn. Throughout the case, Bakke refused to give interviews or personal information to the press. If I could talk to him, I would want to understand more about what I consider his sense of entitlement–that all 100 seats should be available to him as a White man and others like him. It wasn’t enough that 84 seats were available to White candidates like him.
Over the years, there have been many challenges to the use of race in college admissions to elite institutions by other students who somehow felt a sense of entitlement to an opportunity and a seat. I suspect people of color rarely have a sense of entitlement to anything. What we do have is a sense of exclusion, marginalization, inferiority, and impostor syndrome.
Nothing is promised to most people, especially those who are people of color and who have accents, whose name signify difference, and who are without wealth. We are not entitled to many opportunities, including getting a great education or a great job. When there are 3700 applicants for 100 seats in a medical school or 40,000 applicants for only a few thousand undergraduate seats at an elite institution, it makes sense that a variety of factors could determine worthiness of the opportunity, including race and the importance of a diverse learning environment. Much about life in a capitalistic economy is not always about merit, but about access to opportunity, to the resources that are necessary to demonstrate merit. What affirmative action encouraged was a focus on thinking of potential and the capacity to achieve. It was about engaging in the “extra work,” as an institution to identify talent, or the capacity to succeed. I believe that so much is about luck, happenstance, and connections (legacy). Yes hard work is important, but many students work hard, and hard work is not a guarantee of success or opportunity. In America the reality is that schools are fairly desegregated; Black and brown students are in lower performing schools, not because of their desire to learn, but because of the conditions associated with their education, including the role of taxes and home ownership in determining the quality education; and many other factors. Dr. Bettina Love, brilliant as always, calls out the ways in which Black children are particularly harmed in the education system.
This week’s decision by the Supreme Court took me down memory lane. The Supreme Court banned the use of race in admissions’ decisions, unless connected to overcoming obstacles and challenges in life.
My parents were not the beneficiary of quotas or affirmative action when they began their educational journeys in the 1950s/1960s. They both went to historically black institutions in the 1950s/1960s for their undergraduate degrees. My father went to Hampton University for his BA (1963) in physics, coming to America to pursue educational opportunities not available in Sierra Leone, West Africa. My mother went to Jarvis Christian College, a small HBCU in Jarvis, Texas, where as a sharecropper and granddaughter of the formerly enslaved, she could work a year to go to school a year. Graduating in 1951, my mother went to predominantly White institutions, Butler (MA, 1952) , Indiana (1955), and University of Pittsburgh where she got her PhD in Social Work in 1969. My father went on to Carnegie Mellon where he got his MA (1965) and PhD in Nuclear Physics in 1968. Not only were my parents not beneficiaries of affirmative action as students, they had to work exceedingly hard, while being subject to discriminating from faculty. My mother frequently shared the level of racism she experienced, particularly at the University of Pittsburgh, in trying to get her doctorate. The book I wrote about her life details the extraordinary obstacles she had to overcome as a poor, Black woman in America, whose grandmother was enslaved, and whose parents were sharecroppers.
My mom did not celebrate the 4th of July. She celebrated Juneteenth, for as Frederick Douglass aptly noted, the celebration of freedom was inconsistent with enslavement:
Both of my parents accepted faculty positions at Illinois State University in 1969. Whether the opportunity at ISU was based on affirmative action, I do not know. Affirmative Action had its genesis in 1961 through an Executive Order from President Kennedy establishing the President’s Committee on Equal Employment Opportunity requiring federal contractors to “take affirmative action to ensure” equal employment opportunities. It was expanded in 1965 by President Lyndon B. Johnson. After the assassination of Martin Luther King, and the protests by Black students, universities, including Harvard, decided to engage in affirmative action to give preference to a student who had “survived the hazards of poverty, was intellectually thirsty, and had room for growth.” Anemona Hartocollis, October 31, 2022 (New York Times). This perspective was adopted across a wide range of institutions to increase Black student enrollment cognizant of the historical reality that had created a disparity in opportunity.
Although I do not know whether Affirmative Action influenced ISU’s decision to hire my parents, what I do know is racism played a significant role in their experience. My mother became a full professor, overcoming extraordinary racism. I also know that racism killed my father’s career. Three years into his tenure-track career, his contract was abruptly terminated. The lawyer he hired to represent him in his discrimination case said he had never seen the magnitude of racism my father faced.
What stands out for me in both my parents’ lives, my life, and those of many people of color is that if (and that is a big if), affirmative action, (the action required by institutions to address years of discrimination resulting in lower access to opportunity, low performing schools, poverty-stricken lifestyles), could create an opportunity for a historically disadvantage student, the reality was that the student still had to perform at an exceedingly high level, often under even more difficult circumstances than any non-disadvantaged student. My parents repeatedly emphasized that I would need to work twice as hard to get anything and I have.
The color of our skin as African Americans is a visual marker for discrimination and hate. We who study history and the present know the stories and the experiences of African-Americans in White institutions, where our Blackness is a target, and we are treated as if we are a disease, and we are ostracized and humiliated. We are often still the only one in many environments, and we feel the need to be “overqualified.”
Today on the 4th of July, I am just reflecting on what freedom means. Ideally, freedom means the opportunity to pursue our goals and aspirations without barriers, without being discriminated against based on race.
In her dissent, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson shares a definition of freedom for African-Americans, provided at the end of the Civil War:
As African Americans, we are still pursuing freedom.
But, I am taking away a glimmer of hope. I will not be without hope. I am holding on to these few sentences in the majority opinion:
It will be important for all students, particularly students of color, to reflect on the impact of race on their lives, and how their experiences as a person of color have enabled them to even be in a position to apply to a prestigious institution and to make significant contributions to enrich the culture and climate of higher education institutions. And though I disagree with the statement that institutions have focused only on the color of the skin of applicants, I believe that students of color in particular can share the “challenges bested, skills built, or lessons learned” largely because of their experiences of people of color in America.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson’s brilliant dissent provides a starting point for student’s essays that address what it means to overcome obstacles, particularly for African Americans. She references the “well documented ‘intergenerational transmission of inequality that still plagues our citizenry.” She refers to Justice Thurgood Marshall’s dissent in Bakke and his reference to enslavement: “Three hundred and fifty years ago, the Negro was dragged to this country in chains to be sold into slavery. Uprooted from his homeland and thrust into bondage for forced labor, the slave was deprived of all legal rights. It was unlawful to teach him to read; he could be sold away from his family and friends at the whim of his master; and killing or maiming him was not a crime. The system of slavery brutalized and dehumanized both master and slave.” Regents of Univ. of Cal. v. Bakke, 438 U. S. 265, 387–388 (1978
Then, Justice Jackson traces the historical record of obstacles created by the law and private parties, including Jim Crow, to “hinder the progress and prosperity of Black people.”
This powerful dissent provides a guide for any student of color who wants to demonstrate the impact of race on their current life situation.
As the founder of the Black College Institute, now in its 6th year, I know that race matters. The Black College Institute, a program for students interested in the African American experience, is held over 3 weeks in June for high achieving and intellectually curious African American students. Being in an affirming environment focused on academics, leadership, and social justice has transformed over 500 high school students lives this year, and almost 2500 students over the past 5 years. It has been not only life changing for the students in the program, but for the almost 30 current students who support the program.
I hope that all these students talk about the impact of the program for them and that it helps them pursue their dreams, hopefully at Virginia Tech. The students worked on incredible social justice projects that highlighted hiring biases against African Americans, the impact of imposter syndrome, the challenges of mental health in the Black Community, the exploitation of Black college athletes, and so many other issues.
Please take a minute to watch this video of impact of the BCI on both students and the student leader
We are making a difference at Virginia Tech and because of the commitment of our president and institution, we will continue to do so. President Tim Sands’ remarks at the last Board of Visitors’ meeting signify the depth and breadth of his commitment and understanding about the importance of diversity, equity, and inclusion and the impact of diversity on African-Americans in particular.
As Justice Jackson said, “Despite these barriers, Black people persisted,” and as President Sands said, “the harder work ahead will make us better.”
I hope, too, that more institutions and individuals more courageously speak out in support of diversity, in support of the necessity of diversity programs, or the importance of affirming identities that have been minoritized and minimized and dehumanized. There were so many affirmative voices after George Floyd murder, and then now, many seem to have gone silent, as states are defunding and eliminate diversity programs.
Now, more than ever, it is time to speak up and to creatively explore ways of increasing racial diversity in critical segments in society.