February 22, 2018

Did NYU serve a racist dinner to celebrate Black History Month?

The NYT describes the controversy:
On Tuesday, a dining hall at New York University advertised a special meal in honor of Black History Month. On the menu? Barbecue ribs, corn bread, collard greens, and two beverages with racist connotations: Kool-Aid and watermelon-flavored water.

Nia Harris, a sophomore in N.Y.U.’s College of Arts & Science, sought an explanation from Weinstein Passport Dining Hall’s head cook. The cook dismissed her objections, Ms. Harris said in an email to university officials, telling her that the Kool-Aid was actually fruit punch (it was not, she said) and that the dining hall served fruit-flavored water “all the time” (it does, she said, but not watermelon).

The head cook also told Ms. Harris that the employees who planned the menu were black.

Ms. Harris, 19, posted a screen shot of her email on Facebook, along with a post that began, “This is what it’s like to be a black student at New York University.” It spread quickly....
The university president blamed Aramark, the company that provides the university's food service. Aramark blamed 2 of its workers. Supposedly, they deviated from the company's "longstanding commitment to diversity and inclusion." So those 2 guys got fired, which can't be what Nia Harris wanted, can it?
In a phone interview Wednesday evening, Ms. Harris said she chose to believe that the Aramark employees had acted out of ignorance of their menu’s implications, not out of malice. But she added that, while she was glad they had been fired, it should not have been her responsibility to point out the problem — one that she said went far beyond a single incident.
To fire the 2 low-level workers is to say this is not a systemic problem but an inconsequential deviation from the norm by 2 inconsequential people. They're out and now we can return to our proud tradition of diversity and inclusion. [AND: The article is cagy about revealing the facts, but if I'm reading this correctly, the 2 men who lost their job are black.]

ADDED: This post caused me to make a new tag, "watermelon," and to apply to posts in the archive. In this process of retroactive tagging, I found 2 fascinating things.

First, the time Dan Rather said, about our first black President, Barack Obama, "if a state trooper is flagging down the traffic on a highway, Obama couldn't sell watermelons."

Second, the story of how Sayyid Qutb — who inspired al Qaeda — grew to hate Americans. So I dug up the text of "The America I Have Seen: In the Scale of Human Values" Sayyid Qutb ash-Shaheed (1951). The relevant excerpt:
As for their food, that too is very strange. You will attract attention, and cause disbelief, if you request another cube of sugar for the cup of coffee or tea that you drink in America. Sugar is reserved for pickles and salads, while salt, my good sir, is saved for apples and watermelons.

On your plate you will find combined a piece of salted meat, some boiled corn, some boiled peas, and some sweet jam. And on top of all this is what Americans call gravy, which is composed sometimes of fat, vinegar, flour, broth, apples, salt and pepper, and sugar, and water.

We were at the table in one of the cafeterias of the University, when I saw some Americans putting salt on their watermelon. And I was prepared to see these strange fads and also to play jokes on them from time to time. And I said, faking innocence, "I see you sprinkling salt on the watermelon." One of them said," Yes! Don't you do the same in Egypt?" I said, "No! We sprinkle pepper!" A surprised and curious giri said," How would that taste?" I said, "You can try for yourself!" She tasted it and said approvingly," It's tasty!" and so did all the others.

On another day in which watermelon was served, and most of the same people were at the table, I said "Some of us in Egypt use sugar at times instead of pepper." One of them tried it and said, "How tasty!" and so did all the others.
How nice we were to him!

216 comments:

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YoungHegelian said...

Featured speakers: Tony Shalhoub and Hanan Ashrawri!

Don't think so. Both are from Arabic Christian families.

David-2 said...

@exiledonmainstreet - w.r.t. chitlins. Never had them. Had scrapple though. First time I saw it was in the cafeteria at Johns Hopkins University. (*) Sort of like meatloaf, except gray, instead of brown. I mean, really gray, and no brown at all. And greasy enough to slide around a paper plate like a curling stone at the Olympics.

Here's another take on Southern food: Vinny has just never seen a grit before.

(*) I grew up in California. No chitlins, scrapple, or grits there! Nor fiddleheads, collard greens, or okra, thank god!

jms said...

Of course, the long-term consequence of this is that this cafeteria -- and probably every other dining hall on campus -- is never going to serve any ethnic food again ... they won't dare. The fruits of her little campaign will be bland and boring food for herself and all the rest of the students. Too bad for them. But not really.

madAsHell said...

How is the worker supposed to step up to the assigned task of honoring a particular group without seeming to stereotype them?


Henceforth, this shall be remembered as the Althouse Paradox.

Marc in Eugene said...

Exiled, I did see your comment. :-) Years ago, I volunteered for a time doing this and that at a hospice in the Imperial City and one of the generous donors provided chitlins for a community meal-- had to eat some of them. Ack.

Richard said...

I apologize for skipping to the end of the comments. How fortunate am I not to have had more than superficial contact with this whiny race.

MaxedOutMama said...

That's southern food. Blacks who aren't southern probably wouldn't like it and wouldn't want to eat it, so I can see that offense followed.

What are they going to serve on St Patrick's Day? Are people going to flip about it? Trying to politicize food is not going to end well.

I think it is disgusting that the two workers were fired. If it's a mistake, then explain the new rules to them. But don't fire them.

Southern food is not an insult. You may not like it, but it's not an insult to anyone.

MaxedOutMama said...

The idea that watermelon has something to do with blacks is heresy and cultural appropriation, btw. Sure blacks eat it. Who doesn't?

Oh, you poor deprived creatures. Come on down to Cordele for Watermelon Days:
http://www.southwestgeorgia.net/festivals/watermelondays.html

Or you could go to your local one:
http://www.watermelon.org/Festivals

If you get lucky, maybe you can find someone to teach you how to do the Watermelon Crawl:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XWdmi1rHO5g


exiledonmainstreet, green-eyed devil said...

David-2, I am a Northerner but I actually like grits with butter and salt and pepper. And the first time I ate fiddleheads was in a Vancouver restaurant, where they were served with salmon. Since I never saw them in the South, I've been thinking all this time they were a Pacific Northwest thing. :)

wildswan said...

Between stereotyping, cultural appropriation and marginalizing, it isn't possible any longer to please the well-trained sociology student. Cultural and offensive and exclusive have the same meaning in sociology. So the problem is the hegemonic ambition of sociology and its students and the place of sociology in the culture. Sociology tries to say it is "outside and above" studying culture whereas that position is self-assigned and really it is "inside and trying to dominate." That's why whether you serve the foods associated with a culture or you don't, the person trained in sociology can show you are wrong. They are just like the Sophists who come just before Socrates in the history of philosophy. And someone like Jordan Peterson is taking on the Sociological Sophists in the standard western cultural way - by asking questions about what they mean by what they say.

Jaq said...

"Red Drink"

We used to call it "Red Shit." When the cussed tumors heard us call it that, they started ordering it that way.

Jaq said...

Was she a sophomore? False wisdom?

tcrosse said...

At least Missionaries were not on the menu.

n.n said...

Diversity, including racism, is a clear and progressive risk for people who cannot see the person for the colorful clump of cells.

becauseIdbefired said...

Sweet Potato pie, by Obama, and Block.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JZOxqVl5oP4

veni vidi vici said...

That Qutb guy sounds like a typical Indo-Pakistani or Arab who couldn't get past his own internal governors to approach American women, much less get laid, and his subsequent raging hatred towards the west thus comes off as what it sounds like: an outwardly directed self-hatred.

What a wanker.

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