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US fraternities must be required to disavow their racist roots

An honest national conversation about the murky origins of Greek life is a prerequisite for a better future, says Taulby Edmondson

Published on
October 18, 2020
Last updated
October 19, 2020
The Greek alphabet
Source: iStock

At one time, the biggest problems associated with college fraternities were raucous house parties, puerile pranks or grim hazing ceremonies.

This year, far more controversial issues have confronted these staples of US campuses 鈥 and of light-hearted Hollywood comedies from Animal House to Old School and Neighbors. And these issues聽have challenged the popular notion that fraternities 鈥 as well as, to a lesser extent, female sororities 鈥 are little more than harmless social clubs.

In the months since George Floyd鈥檚 death in police custody, anti-frat movements have across US universities as members decided that camaraderie and promises of post-graduation professional connections don鈥檛 outweigh their association鈥檚 deeply exclusionary, racist and misogynist roots, which continue to structurally produce harm.

Some called for of these historically white organisations, whose titles consist of meaningless combinations of Greek letters, such as kappa, delta and, above all, alpha. Others want Greek life abolished wholesale, arguing that reform 鈥 which would require professionalised national organisations to put accountability before lucrative public images 鈥 is impossible.

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Walking away from these organisations will be tough for many students. After all, as John Hechinger鈥檚 2017 book,聽True Gentlemen: The Broken Pledge of America鈥檚 Fraternities, correctly notes, fraternities became the 鈥渦nofficial bartenders鈥 of many campuses after the drinking age rose to 21 nationwide in 1984.

Given the troubling racial history of many fraternities, however, it is understandable that many students are doing so 鈥 or at least speaking out. In early July, I called for universities to those fraternities bound to that celebrated the original Ku Klux Klan and sought to redeem the Confederacy and the virtues of the slaveholding South.

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The Kappa Alpha Order (KA) was a聽symbol of that movement, and its continued veneration of its 鈥渋nspirator鈥, , the Confederate general, is perhaps the most egregious example of a fraternity refusing to acknowledge its racist past. This refusal was recently illustrated when KA鈥檚 Xi chapter at Southwestern University was suspended after it (officially, the rebuke was because the denunciation contained 鈥渢hreatening and incendiary language鈥 and had not been cleared with KA鈥檚 central office).

The reputation of this southern general is, of course, still a contentious issue in the US, despite historians鈥 agreement that Lee was a and who used his positions to promote racist and structural inequalities. KA, which has about 150,000 members, continues to describe him as a 鈥渢rue gentleman鈥 and 鈥渢he last true knight鈥, seemingly unaware of, or unconcerned with, the ways in which these 鈥渧irtues鈥 reinforce race and gender hierarchies. What鈥檚 more, in practice, KA鈥檚 guiding principles of chivalry, gentility and the protection of womanhood were used to excuse Jim Crow-era racial violence.

That claim may sound extreme, but consider the championing of lynching on the national lecture circuit by John Temple Graves, a former KA knight commander (a position akin to being its national president). During , for instance, Graves expounded that the lynch mob is 鈥渢he most effective restraint that the age holds for the control of rape鈥, to which it responds 鈥渨ith the rope, the bullet, and鈥he torch鈥. He added that 鈥渢he mob stands today as the most potent bulwark between the women of the South and such carnival of crime as would infuriate the world and precipitate the annihilation of the Negro race鈥.

KA鈥檚 journal called the speech 鈥渁 most powerful address on the subject of lynching and the race problem鈥, and, years later, Graves was invited to speak at KA鈥檚 1923 national convention. There, he explicitly linked the frat鈥檚 principles and its mythological image of Lee when he toasted Lee as the 鈥渘oblest character that has lived in mortal flesh since the Babe was born in Bethlehem鈥. He added that born with Lee was the 鈥淜A creed.鈥

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Graves鈥 toast was reprinted in KA鈥檚 handbook as recently as 2015, but his defence of white womanhood derives from the Jim Crow idea that white women required the protection of chivalric Southern gentlemen from the lust of black men. It is nothing short of a call for racial violence.

Almost a century on from these events, many may ask if the veneration of Lee and the ideals his memory came to represent still matters. They might find their answer in the disturbing incident last year when three members of the University of Mississippi鈥檚 KA chapter made headlines for . Till, a 14-year-old African American youth from Chicago, became a national civil rights icon in the 1950s after he was lynched for allegedly whistling at , a white woman, in a Mississippi grocery store. The three KAs posed, smiling, at the site where Till鈥檚 mutilated body was recovered from the Tallahatchie River.

It is only fair to note that, as well as Southwestern鈥檚, other KA chapters have also come forward to demand that the organisation cut ties with Lee, including the one at Washington and Lee University. But until university administrations launch an honest national conversation about the damaging ideals that rest behind the foundational figures and principles of such fraternities 鈥 and require fraternities to disavow them or be removed 鈥 students will continue to be uneasy about the role of Greek life on campus.

Taulby Edmondson is an adjunct professor of history, religion and culture at Virginia Tech.

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