Student petition seeking permission to use N-word at Marina High was an April Foolsâ joke gone wrong, district official says
A petition circulated at Marina High School in Huntington Beach asking students of color for permission to use the N-word prompted school officials to discipline two students involved in the incident, a member of the school board said Wednesday.
Duane Dishno, president of the Huntington Beach Union High School District, described the petition as âa bad joke gone wrong on April Foolsâ Day.â
âKids made a mistake,â Dishno added. âItâs been dealt with. Everyone is OK.â
A student offended by the hand-written petition addressed to âBrown Peopleâ took a picture of it, shared it on social media and notified the principal after school, Dishno said.
The student who shared photos of the petition online said described it in a social media post as deeply offensive and hurtful.
The parents of the two students who created the petition were contacted and their children were disciplined the following day, Dishno said, adding that that those students were âremorseful.â
The student who shared photos of the petition online didnât see the attempt at humor.
âThe fact that this boy has the audacity to ask me and my melanin girly to sign an n word pass is appalling and a perfect representation of marina high school,â the student wrote over images of a boy holding the petition. âIf youâre from my school please give me this boys @. Please this is disgusting. Yâall can think itâs a joke all you want. This is GROSS and wrong and for you to say the n word isnât used like that anymore how ...â
A second picture shows the handwritten petition with the title âBrown People.â The petitionâs text is largely illegible in the photos but about 15 signatures were collected at the time the image was taken.
âSlander a whole race????? Who the ⌠says that without genuinely meaning it?â wrote the person who posted that photo. ââThis allows me to slander a whole race.â â
The district did not release the names or ages of the students involved in the apparent prank or exactly what kind of discipline they received.
Dishno said school officials told him the offended student posted on her Facebook page that her âschool has taken this situation very seriously, and the boys are dealing with consequences for their actions. Thank you again for the support. It means the world to me.â The Daily Pilot did not gain access to or review the Facebook post Dishno described.
Marina High Principal Jessie Marion did not respond to a request for comment.
Natalie Frey, a mother of a Marina student not involved in the incident, said that she found out about the petition when her daughter called her attention to it on social media.
Frey said the school sends e-mails âall the time,â but that she did not receive any official notice from the school about the petition.
âThis is more than a silly joke,â she said. âI think the way [the administration] dealt with it is extremely unfortunate. It was an opportunity to educate students on culture and on hate crimes, racism and bullying.
âThereâs so many deaths of kids that are killing themselves because theyâre being bullied. As a parent if we donât have the opportunity to talk to our children, or even know whatâs going on, how does that help us bridge the gap or protect our children?â
Frey called it âappallingâ that the school did not disclose the event to parents.
âWe have to have these important conversations with our kids for all kids of color,â she said. âWhat kind of message does that send to kids of color? That their feelings donât matter? That itâs not a big deal?â
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