Bottles Thrown at Black Students by White Students at Providence College, According to Reports

GoLocalProv News Team

Bottles Thrown at Black Students by White Students at Providence College, According to Reports

Reports of a racially motivated assault of Providence College students have community members looking for answers.
Providence College and Providence Police are investigating reports that beer bottles were thrown at black students who say they were targeted after being turned away from an off-campus party on Saturday -- and the head of the Providence NAACP has said "enough is enough."

PC President Fr. Brian Shanley sent a letter to the college community (see BELOW) saying police investigations are ongoing, and that he was "deeply saddened by the incident" that he said left the women feeling "fearful, devalued, angry, and humiliated."

The head of the NAACP Providence Branch is calling for a meeting with Shanley following the reports of racially motivated violence. 

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"I"m going to ask for a meeting with Fr. Shanley. If there are perpetrators of racial name calling or throwing bottles, they should be expelled," said NAACP Providence Branch President Jim Vincent. "There have been issues at PC over the years, this isn't the only incident.  Enough is enough. We're coming to plateau, and something needs to be done."

Professor Weighs In

Professor Julia Jordan-Zachery, Director of Black Studies at PC, spoke with GoLocal about the incident -- and aftermath. 

"It's a pretty consistent story about what happened.  These women went to the house to get a friend of theirs, and said the young man at the door supposedly told them, 'We don't want your people here,' and pointed in the direction of Chad Brown," said Jordan-Zachery. "Then the women say they saw white students being let in, which is when the real trouble started. I heard they called them 'black bitch'. There's a race-gender connotation of being called that.  The only thing worse they could have been called is nigger bitch.  Then they had bottles thrown at them. I don't think they were actually hit with water, but that's not the point."

Jordan-Zachery said she has concerns about what she heard about how the incident was reported to police. 

"The students called 911, they said they've been assaulted, and this is a racially motivated assault. I just learned that Providence College pays police detail on the weekends, fascinating in and of itself," said Jordan-Zachery.  "Well the police refused to help these young women.  I've seen the report, it has incident type as 'person annoyed.' So if that's not bad enough, it said she's appeared intoxicated.  If she were in fact intoxicated, there is protocol -- she should have been charged with public intoxication, she should have been taken in.  None of that happened.  There were enough adults on the scene who have written reports saying she was not intoxicated, just visibly upset.  I heard from one student that he was scared that one woman was having a panic attack and couldn't stop hyperventilating.  The report detracts from what happened to these women, it detracts from the history," said Jordan-Zachery. 

"If we're now  'investigating" what happened, historically speaking investigations at PC of racial biases don't go well," said Jordan-Zachery. "A couple of years ago students were called "nigger" on campus, and that was long drawn out process, where the other students said they actually said another word -- that was two years ago.  Nothing happened.  There's a deep history.  Talk to alumni, this isn't new."

"Fr. Shanley is at a board meeting in Florida, and I don't know when he's due back," said Jordan-Zachery. "This is an opportunity for him in a leadership capacity to show greater leadership.  The email came out this morning -- the incident took place on Saturday."

Shanley Letter to PC Community

Shanley sent the following letter to PC community Wednesday morning, following the incident reported on Saturday night. 

Dear Members of the Providence College Community:

I regret to inform you that the College received the following report regarding an incident that occurred off-campus. Late last Saturday night/early Sunday morning, a group of five female PC students of color walked to a nearby off-campus residence of some PC students to join their friends at a party. Upon arriving, they were informed that the house was full and no other people were being allowed in. 

As they began to leave, the students said they noticed that other students – white students – were being allowed into the party. After raising questions as to why they were turned away, they reported that water and beer bottles were thrown in their direction from a balcony. This behavior was accompanied by comments that made the targeted students – women of color – feel fearful, devalued, angry, and humiliated.

The incident was reported to both the Providence Police Department and the PC Office of Campus Safety and Security, and investigations are ongoing. While I am deeply saddened by this incident, I applaud the courage of these students to bring their report forward. 

As President, I want to assure you that this incident is being investigated thoroughly and fairly, consistent with our core value that all members of the College community be treated with dignity and respect at all times. We know from our experience at PC, and that of colleges and universities across the country, that the impact of such incidents is not limited to the students who experience them; they bring pain to our entire community. 

We will continue to work collaboratively with all members of the College community toward creating and sustaining an environment in which all students feel welcome, safe and supported.

Sincerely,

Brian J. Shanley, O.P.


Legacy of Racism in New England

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