Mount Holyoke opens Black History Month with celebratory ceremony

Sarah Bell '25, Qiana Pierre '25, Sydney Williams '23 and Wil Abam-DePass '23 help with event.

Sarah Bell '25, Qiana Pierre '25, Sydney Williams '23 and Wil Abam-DePass '23 help with event. Photo courtesy of Annmarie Murdzia.

By Tara Monastesse ’25 and Bryn Healy ’24

News Editor | Staff Writer

On the evening of Friday, Feb. 2, the opening ceremony for Mount Holyoke’s observation of Black History Month was held in Blanchard Hall’s Great Room. After a land acknowledgement by Associate Dean of Students, Community and Belonging Latrina Denson, student representatives from various Black student organizations on campus welcomed attendees to the ceremony. Gathered around confetti-strewn tables lit with flickering candles, attendees listened to presentations on Black culture and history in the United States, as well as a summary of events that will be hosted by the College and Black student organizations throughout February.

Following introductions, attendees stood for a recorded performance of “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” also known as the Black national anthem. The song, originally adapted from the 1900 poem of the same name by former NAACP leader James Weldon Johnson, was described as a “rallying cry during the Civil Rights movement” by the NAACP.

The theme for Black History Month at Mount Holyoke this year is “_____ and Beauty,” with the blank being filled in with a new word for each week of programming: History and Beauty, Intersectionality and Beauty, Black Voices and Beauty and Blackness and Beauty. The presenters explained that the theme gets its name from the phrase “Black is beautiful,” popularized in the 1960s and 70s as an activist slogan. The catalyst for the Black is Beautiful movement was Kwame Brathwaite’s fashion show in 1962. The show highlighted Grandassa Models who refused to follow Western beauty standards and were followers of Marcus Garvey’s African Nationalist Pioneer Movement.

“We were able to come up with something that exemplified how people may define themselves, specifically Black individuals, [and] what beauty means to them, and what Black beauty means to them,” Wil Abam-DePass ’23, co-chair of the Association of Pan-African Unity, said in an interview with Mount Holyoke News. “Which is why we left the first part of the line open, because there’s so many different ways. And beauty doesn’t just mean appearance — it can also mean there’s beauty in education, there’s beauty in acceptance, there’s beauty in diversity, there’s beauty in justice — different things.”

The students then gave a brief presentation on the history of Black History Month, describing how it began as a week designated by historian Carter G. Woodson and the Association for the Study of African American Life and History in 1926 to be celebrated during the second week of February. According to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, Woodson and the ASALH chose February as it was the birth month of Fredrick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln. Black students in the 1960s began to observe Black History Month on their college campuses, a practice which escalated to national prominence upon being officially recognized by President Gerald Ford in 1976.

Presenters also discussed the history of the National Pan-Hellenic Council, a group of African American fraternities and sororities commonly referred to as the Divine Nine. According to their website, the National Pan-Hellenic Council was founded at Howard University, a Historically Black University, in 1930 by “Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity and Omega Psi Phi Fraternity.” The current nine members of the council describe their core goals as community action and awareness. 

Toni-Ann Williams ’23, president of the Pi Iota chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc, described her relationship to the group, saying, “[it] holds a lot of weight in my life … it’s a dream come true.” Williams also announced Pi Iota’s upcoming “Galentines” day event to be hosted on Feb. 12 at 7 p.m. at University of Massachusetts Amherst’s Malcolm X Cultural Center, an event described by the Pi Iota Instagram as “a love-centered event filled with discussions, vision board making and light refreshments.”

A list of events planned to celebrate Black History Month at Mount Holyoke throughout February was presented, which includes over a dozen events, features film screenings, author readings, educational panels and more. Some of these events include a screening and discussion of the 2015 documentary “Too Black to be French?” on Feb. 15 at 6:30 p.m. in the Unity Center, and a panel entitled “A Journey of Poetry, Love and Authenticity with Poet Lynette Johnson” to be held on Feb. 24 at 6:30 p.m. in the Betty Shabazz Community Room. A four-part weekly series watching and discussing the docuseries “Hair Tales” will happen in the Betty Shabazz Cultural Center every Monday this month. Students who sign up for “Hair Tales” discussions are eligible for $50 off with an MHC student stylist. The Anthropology, English and Africana Studies Departments and the Nexus in Museums, Archives and Public History are co-sponsoring a virtual reading with author André Le Mont Wilson on Feb. 20 at 7:30 p.m.

The opening ceremony concluded with a reception, where speakers and attendees socialized and enjoyed refreshments. The College’s programming for Black History Month will conclude with a Black History Gala on Feb. 26 at 7 p.m. in Chapin Auditorium, as well as a closing ceremony on Feb. 28 at 7 p.m. in Gamble Auditorium.

Editor’s note: Sarah Bell ’25, present in the photo, is a member of Mount Holyoke News.

Senate discusses updates and announcements for the spring term

The convened Senate. (Photo By Ali Meizel, '23.)

By Paige Comeau ’26 

Staff Writer 

On Jan. 31, the Student Government Association opened its first senate meeting of the semester with a greeting to all the members, welcoming them back after the break. Following the reading of the agenda and the land acknowledgment, the meeting began with E-board updates.

First, it was announced that during the spring semester, SGA Senate will be hosting several town halls in addition to their regular meetings. The guests and dates of these meetings are to be determined. 

Second, SGA President, Maille Romulus ’24,  discussed the binder drive, which occurred on the evening of Jan. 27. In total, the SGA was able to order 33 out of the 70 binders requested. The deficit was due to several binders being out of stock, but the binders that were not able to be ordered will be ordered with a slight delay. The first 33 binders should be arriving soon. 

Senate closed E-board updates by discussing the latest issue of the Newsflush, to be distributed to the hall senators. Newsflushes should be posted in all residence hall bathrooms. 

The senate then moved onto the open floor, where senators and representatives were welcomed to introduce themselves and their organizations or halls and to give announcements or bring up concerns. 

During the updates and announcements portion of the open floor, several students promoted upcoming events and deadlines. A member of the board of the class of 2025 brought up their upcoming Valentine’s Masquerade Ball, to be held on Feb. 10 in the Great Room from 8-11 p.m. A member of the class board for 2024 announced that they were still looking for actors and crew for J-Show. The link to sign up was sent out in an email on Feb. 1. Finally, an E-board member speaking on behalf of Residential Life reminded everyone that RA and orientation leader applications are due Feb. 12. More information about those applications can be found on Embark or on the TVs around the Student Center. 

Following announcements and updates, the session opened for questions and concerns. The senator for MacGregor asked if there is any way to get a printer installed in MacGregor or Ham halls. When asked why they found this necessary, they elaborated that because MacGregor and Ham are so out of the way from the rest of campus, it can be an issue of accessibility for some students. They believed that it might be beneficial because of the time and distance it takes to reach the nearest printer. 

Next, a representative for the Jewish Student Union brought up the issue of Narcan for RAs, something that had previously been discussed in the fall semester. They asked if there were any updates, and an E-board member confirmed that there were not, but that the issue had been brought up to ResLife and was possibly being discussed. The E-board member also stated that there might be other people, such as a member of ResLife, who might know more. 

The Mead Hall senator raised a concern about the new dining hall setup. Since the L’Chaim-Kosher station still serves with paper plates, she wondered if the dining hall should still have garbage and recycling bins out for students to use to avoid extra work for the dining staff. A dining manager who attended the meeting spoke up and stated that they do have bins inside the kitchen, and that having them inside not only saves workers from completing the extra work of moving them from outside the kitchen to inside but also creates a safer environment for students, as no one is liable to slip on spilled food. 

Finally, another senate representative asked if there was a possibility of changing the COVID-19 bathroom schedule, as she had had COVID-19 a few weeks ago, and found the schedule to be problematic, especially because there was no time during the middle of the night. 

To close, senators and representatives began work on their commissions. The commissions are academic outreach, accessibility, COVID-19 health and safety, dining, environmental sustainability, international student outreach, mental health outreach and SGA anti-racism, each ranging from three to five members. To complete their work, members were asked to touch base with their commission and review past notes so that everyone was on the same page about the issues and topics that were being discussed. If they had not yet emailed a point of contact for their concern they were asked to do so. 

Additionally, commissions were to draft a petition or begin drafting a petition. Petition samples were available for reference. Once the petitions had been drafted, each commission showed it to their E-board member. Following this activity, the meeting concluded.

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A newly proposed bill in the Massachusetts House of Representatives would allow in-state incarcerated people to remove between 60 and 365 days from their sentences in exchange for the donation of their organs or marrow, according to Insider. Though the bill — entitled “act to establish the Massachusetts incarcerated individual bone marrow and organ donation program,” according to CBS Boston — has not yet been passed, it has struck controversy among leadership within the state. 

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