Houston Indymedia
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But
last year, a few days into the first semester, a new student, a
freshman African American, asked the principal at an assembly, if he,
too, could sit under the tree. He was told he could sit anywhere he
liked.
Three white boys on the rodeo
team apparently disagreed. The next morning, there were three nooses
hanging from the shade tree in the courtyard.
Anthony
Jackson is one of two black teachers at Jena High School. He laughs
ruefully, as he recalls watching the nooses swaying in the tree.
"I jokingly said to another teacher, 'One's for you, one's for me. Who's the other one for?'"
Many
in Jena's black community wanted the three white students expelled. But
when the white superintendent and other school administrators
investigated, they decided the nooses were a prank. Instead of
expulsion or arrest, the three received in-school suspension.
Blacks called the punishment a double standard.
"White
students can do things and receive a slap on the hand," Jackson says.
But authorities "want to throw the book at blacks," he adds.
An Incident Escalates
A
few of the black athletes, the stars of the football team, took the
lead in resisting. The day after the nooses were hung, they reportedly
organized a silent protest under the tree.
The
school called an assembly and summoned the police and the district
attorney. Black students sat on one side, whites on the other. District
Attorney Reed Walters warned the students he could be their friend or
their worst enemy. He lifted his fountain pen and said, "With one
stroke of my pen, I can make your life disappear."
That
evening, black students told their parents that the DA was looking
right at them. Walters denies that. Billy Fowler, a member of the
school board, doesn't believe it, either.
"He
said some pretty strong things," says Fowler, "but I don't think he was
directing it to anyone in particular. I think he just wanted people to
calm it down."
But things didn't calm
down. Some whites felt triumphant; some blacks were resentful. Fights
began to break out at the high school. But that year, the football team
was having an unusually good season and the black athletes were a major
reason why. So while there were fights throughout the fall, nobody
wanted to take any action that would hurt the team.
When
the season was over, so was the truce. On Nov. 30, somebody burned down
Jena High. Whites thought blacks were responsible, blacks thought the
opposite.
Charges and Public Outrage
The
next night, 16-year-old Robert Bailey and a few black friends tried to
enter a party attended mostly by whites. When Bailey got inside, he was
attacked and beaten. The next day, tensions escalated at a local
convenience store. Bailey exchanged words with a white student who had
been at the party. The white boy ran back to his truck and pulled out a
pistol grip shotgun. Bailey ran after him and wrestled him for the gun.
After some scuffling, Bailey and his
friends took the gun away and brought it home. Bailey was eventually
charged with theft of a firearm, second-degree robbery and disturbing
the peace. The white student who pulled the weapon was not charged at
all.
The following Monday, Dec.4, a
white student named Justin Barker was loudly bragging to friends in the
school hallway that Robert Bailey had been whipped by a white man on
Friday night. When Barker walked into the courtyard, he was attacked by
a group of black students. The first punch knocked Barker out and he
was kicked several times in the head. But the injuries turned out to be
superficial. Barker was examined by doctors and released; he went out
to a social function later that evening.
Six
black students were arrested and charged with aggravated assault. But
District Attorney Reed Walters increased the charges to attempted
second-degree murder. That provoked a storm of black outrage.
"Jena has always been a racist town," says Bailey's mother, Caseptla
Bailey. "We've understood that….It has been that way since I've lived
here."
But school board member Billy Fowler disagrees.
As far as racial problems, our community is no different than any other community," Fowler says.
Fowler
is one of the few leaders with the school administration or local law
enforcement willing to talk to the media. The principal, the school
superintendent and the district attorney all declined repeated calls
for comment.
Fowler says he is
appalled at reports by outside media outlets that he claims portray
Jena as a racist community. But he and many other white leaders agree
that the charges are unfair.
"I think
it's safe to say some punishment has not been passed out fairly and
evenly," Fowler says. "I think probably blacks may have gotten a little
tougher discipline through the years.
"Our town is not a bunch of bigots. They're Christian, law-abiding citizens that wouldn't mistreat anybody."
But
the black students and their families feel mistreated. The first to go
to court was Mychal Bell, the team's star running and defensive back.
Bell's court-appointed lawyer refused to mount any defense at all,
instead resting his case immediately after two days of government
presentation. An all-white jury found Bell guilty.
A
talented athlete, Bell had a real shot at a Division I football
scholarship. He now faces up to 22 years in prison. The other five
black students await trial on attempted murder charges.
Over the weekend, Jena High School had the big shade tree in the courtyard chopped into firewood.
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