Last Friday, Nikole Churchill became Hampton University's first non-black homecoming queen and the second non-black homecoming queen of any historically black college or university. Her crowning, by five judges, has caused controversy, as students and alumni debate whether Churchill deserves the distinction.The 22-year-old Churchill is Hawaiian, with an Italian mother and a father from Guam. According to WTKR, she was chosen out of 10 applicants in the competition and reportedly built her win on the platform of mentoring girls ages 11–14 on topics including "self-esteem, body image, teenage pregnancies and nutrition."
No matter how strong her presentation, though, many are questioning what it means for a non-black woman to win at an HBCU. One Black Voices poster said:
Well, Hampton always liked damn near white chicks, guess they just said, "F it this time," and went all the way. I say this as a Hampton U hater.
Another said:
While I can't make a judgment on how Hampton runs things, wasn't this also the school that told its business students they couldn't have natural hair styles?
Yet another added:
If you have ever attended a majority White school, you would know that they would rather cut off their hand then[sic] to vote for a black young woman. The truth of the matter is that White folk look out for their own.
There are those, though, who do feel that Churchill's win signals a progressive win for the campus. Executive Pageant Director Sheila Maye said:
We have all kinds of people on our campus, we are not in a cocoon. As far as I'm concerned, we need to get her ready to serve HU and to move on and represent us at Miss Virginia.
Arthur A. Turner, a 1982 Howard University graduate and Maryland resident, said:
We now have to move forward in our thinking because the world is different, America is different, and we have all been fighting for change. And as we continue that fight, we must be accepting of the things that we fight for.
Churchill, for her part, hasn't been passive in the controversy. As a matter of fact, she wrote a letter to President Barack Obama on Sunday, beseeching him to visit Hampton and shed light on the student body about why diversity is important:
I am hoping that perhaps you would be able to make an appearance to my campus, Hampton University, so that my fellow Hamptonians can stop focusing so much on the color of my skin and doubting my abilities to represent, but rather be proud of the changes our nation is making toward accepting diversity.
Since then, Churchill has apologized for bringing the president in to the conversation.
While people may be quick to call those "Hampton haters" racist, I understand where they're coming from. I am hard pressed to find positive images of black people, let alone black women, celebrated in a consistent and reliable way. Just the other day, I was trying to find a television program for my children, where they can see their reflections, and had to wait for Cosby reruns on Nick at Nite.
Therefore, when you do hear about an HBCU's homecoming competition, you kind of expect that at least in that arena black people will have representation among the winners.
With the resounding victory of President Obama, many of us have been crying for change. Still, how can we walk in to this "new era" without being influenced by our past -- and certain aspects of our present -- invisibility? Can we be honest about the inequality that we know and embrace the equality that we wish for? Or is there a double-standard, where black people are expected to be gracious and affirming about embracing other races in predominantly black spaces, but are not met with the same goodwill when we attempt to "infiltrate" predominantly white spaces.
What are your thoughts?


Comments: (593)
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By: Lisa on 10/18/2009 8:54AM
If this is the case that non-black people do not represent or cannot understand the history of Hampton University or even any of the HBC/HBU, then all such univerisities should become private universities unfunded by Federal/State money. This way the Black culture can maintain and screen out any non-black people and preserve their history and maintain a Black HCQ and HCK. The US Govt nor the State of Virginia should not fund nor will fund anything that promotes segregation. Isn't that why MLK marched - to desegregate and create equal opportunities for ALL. Not create equal opportunities for Blacks ONLY.
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By: Cathaline Carter on 10/21/2009 8:22PM
Tammy, I feel you.
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By: susie on 2/27/2010 8:42PM
Why does the black woman have to be queen when she is representing the school who allows the non white student to enter. Once you become a student and pay your fees, you are entitled to all of the extra-curricular activities. Come on lady, you can't have your cake and eat it too. Either we want our equal rights or we don't. The wind blows both ways, and what's good for the goose(us) is good for the gander(them). Did it bother you when the queen of color was named Miss America. I am a colored, Negro, Black, Afro-American, and an African American. I have been living long enough to wear all of those titles, and I know what I am. I have lived through segregation, Jim Crow, and Civil Rights era days, and we still have a long way to go before we have full equality. I just wish we would stop playing the race card and get down to the business of making our own lives fruitful and successful. This society may not have given us the lobster dinner, but it has provided the net to catch one for ourselves. It is up to us to learn how to get that critter in the pot and onto the table. Stop crying and get busy. We can't expect equal rights to be subjective. It's for all of us. Don't let the evilness of the some whites turn you into their clones. We are better than that. God bless.....
One last thing...this queen is a person of color. Don't let her complexion throw you. There are too many Americans living just like her...mixed heritage
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By: Black Canseco on 10/13/2009 7:03PM
This is a tough one. As a Black male who attended a "mainstream college" with almost no black women, i can say my school wouldn't have picked a black woman. No black woman would've been good enough in their eyes.
The dilemma is should minority communities have to be as "open" as white communities. Empirically and all things being equal the answer is "yes".
The struggle comes in knowing that HBCUs exist not out of black bias against america but precisely the revise.
Nikole Churchill is a beautiful young woman who'd have few if any problems being seen as such at any BigTen or Pac-10 or even Ivy league school. They'd fall all over themselves complimenting her "exotic" looks. Unfortunately the same can't be said for the women she beat out given how America still views black womanhood and black beauty.
This is a tricky topic that's too complex to be reduced to a quick "close-minded black folk" vs. "self-hating black folk."
But I wonder if ultimately will other HBCUs be "forced" or "pressured" to elevate its respective non-black student bodies above its black student body out of some sense of "progress"?
I wonder.
Clearly I don't know Nikole Churchill at all. I'm sure she's a nice, considerate and culturally aware woman. I'd be curious as to the impact that her win may have on future pageants.
BC
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By: Dragon on 10/18/2009 6:01PM
I found your comment to be very thought provoking. It will be interesting to see not only the future impact of this pageant, but the short term impacts it will have at other institutes of higher learning and possibly even high schools.
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By: budman692u on 10/13/2009 10:47PM
I'm happy for her, she stood up to what she belives in and won the crown for a reason. That reason being, that she is proud of herself and noone or nothing will stop her from taking chances to breaking the barriers of the racial profilling..Congrats to the New Miss Hampton.
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By: kathy on 10/17/2009 11:01PM
I agree with Budman, this girl did a very brave and courageous thing by EVEN RUNNING at all! My god what she must have been up against while running. We're sure getting an idea now arn't we?? I'm sure it must have been rough going up against all the blacks that didn't even want her running. I can hear the nasty chatter about her, and the pressure she must have gone thru to do this where all these racist black people must have put her down --- possibly threats and barriers she had to jump thru hoops to even run! AND NOW...look whats she's going thru now, with all these black bit***s out to get her for winning. They even jumped on her because she wrote Obama to have a talk about diversity. WHY? because she wrote to THEIR black president? or are they so determined to be mean nasty racists that they sure didn't want OBAMA preaching to THEM about diversity?! I have always thought this venue (BLACK VOICES) should be banned by the ACLU or by lawsuit determined that this publication is nothing but hate-speech, discrinatory, and politically incorrect in this time and age. We still have affirmative action which is now nothing but reverse discrination! How many times, I couldn't even guess, probably in the BILLIONS has affirmative action given Blacks the job or the placement in college, over a superior white person that has twice the college, twice the abilities, and twice the skill and intelligence!!!
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By: kanye fan on 10/13/2009 8:44PM
A pageant is more than just about beauty.... However, when it comes to black women, we are forever in debt to ourselves to compete with a white women's beauty or standards. Therefore, I would agree with some to say, if it's a black school, then let a black woman represent! If a black women portrays a positive image, this will be a message to other black women and the upcoming youth to realize they are beautiful,intelligent and its ok to be comfortable in your own skin without comparing yourself to the image of a white woman. To add, I honestly dont see what the hype is about when it comes to a white women's euro beauty. Hell! its only smoke and mirrors, because when they get old, the majority look a hot dam mess! I am not hating, but as someone mentioned, how often do you see a black women being praised or represented compared to her white counterparts? or how many black beauty queens do you see running and crowned at an all white school? That's the double freaking standard!
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By: Jessica A. on 10/14/2009 8:48PM
I really don't mean to discredit everyone's thoughts and views, but I would just like to let people know that it is possible for a young, black lady to be crowned Homecoming and Prom queen at a school that is basically all white (over 90%). I would know...it happened at my school! In a rural area in North Carolina. And guess what...no one had a problem with it (or at least kept their mouths shut unlike this university and its students about someone non-black being crowned).
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By: ruthsgardens on 10/16/2009 10:12AM
The double freaking standard was just posted by you.Read your own post.I am 80 years old.I have watched for decades.Blacks being angry about slavery even though they were not there or even born yet.The living whites have been persecuted about this since.Blacks were angry about not being allowed in white schools and public establishments.Protests brought those barriers down.So now blacks have made their own black schools,establishments,tv etc.And are putting the same barriers back up.You are no different than the whites back then.Is that racist?You said you are not.So they must have not been either,right? Name one professing all white school now,or tv channel,or beauty pageant,or magazine.And don't go scouring a white supremist site to find one either.You are the pot calling the kettle black.
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