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NEWMAN – Outgoing school trustee Barbara Alexander raised allegations Monday that racism had reared its ugly head in the weeks leading up to the school board election. Alexander, in her comments during a board meeting, denounced a YouTube clip of her October exchange with an Orestimba teacher as designed to incite racial hatred.
Click here to watch the meeting
(courtesy of Barbosa Video Services).
Moments after Alexander and Derek Solano, who were defeated in the Nov.
3 board race, were acknowledged by Superintendent Rick Fauss and
received an appreciative round of applause for their service, Alexander
stunned those in attendance as she lashed out at the YouTube clip and
what she characterized as lies and rumors circulating in the community.
The clip showed video of an October board meeting exchange between
Alexander and teacher Catherine Quittmeyer during which Alexander, who
is African American, told the teacher that she did not have the
background to teach the African American culture depicted in the novel
“Why the Caged Bird Sings.”
Alexander contends the narrative in the clip used “buzz words”
favored by hate groups to inflame racial tensions, and that the
misinformation found fertile ground in the community.
“There is a gossip blog at the Index; and then there is the Newman
rumor mill,” she said, reeling off the names of three people who she
said were rumored to be behind the YouTube clip. “There are people who
lie, they have these half-truths and they do all this throughout the
community, and there are people who sit there and listen to them.”
Alexander said the seriousness of the situation was such that her
82-year-old father made her promise that she would keep a gun by her
bed, and she received a text message from a sibling asking if any
crosses had been burned in her yard.
She termed the clip “race baiting,” which Alexander defined as an inflammatory tactic designed to incite racial hatred.
Hatred and racism, she said, cannot be hidden.
“If you have little sheets tucked away in your heart; if you have
little crosses burning in your heart, that’s going to come out of your
mouth and it’s going to manifest itself as a YouTube video,” Alexander
stated.
She said she felt compelled to speak out to educate the public about
what she considered to be race baiting. “The next time you think about
making a video like this, maybe you’ll think about that,” Alexander
said.
She thanked the 234 voters “who did not believe these racist lies” and showed their support for her at the polls.
Superintendent Rick Fauss said Tuesday that Alexander’s statements
were hers and hers alone, and in no way reflect the views or position
of the school district.
“She operated on her own and said what she said. There was obviously
some hurt from the experience she talked about,” he commented. “We
respect the right of people to voice their opinions. Unfortunately, in
an electronic age, that sort of thing goes out to a huge venue. It is
hard to know the impact it makes on somebody until you hear responses
like we did last night.”
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