The Famuan

Hazing at FAMU: Students Tells Stories of Violence, Mistreatment

By Peter McKay

Special to The FAMUAN

Published: Sunday, December 4, 2011

Updated: Monday, December 5, 2011

By Peter McKay

Special to The Famuan

Last week, I began coordinating with FAMU student-journalists to collect reports from victims and witnesses of hazing at the university using a simple Web form. As a proud alumnus heartbroken by the death of Robert Champion, I felt it was vital to collaborate across generations to get a better understanding of a cross-generational problem.

Rattlers of all ages have been responding. As of late Saturday, 15 people have come forward to describe hazing incidents spanning almost 50 years. We've had a dozen alumni and three students respond.

The number of submissions so far doesn't constitute a massive sample, we know. But it's a start. We know we're fighting an uphill battle against deep-rooted subcultures of secrecy on campus, and so we're going to continue gathering data beyond today, offering the opportunity to remain anonymous if you wish. Please keep the responses coming at http://famuhazing.wordpress.com/report-hazing/. There is a direct link to the blog available at www.thefamuanonline.com.

Here's a summary of what we have so far:

•Accusers have come forward regarding not only the Marching 100, but also seven Greek-letter organizations and five non-Greek student organizations.

•The organizations that were reported at least once each by current students were the Marching 100, Alpha Phi Alpha, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Delta Sigma Theta, and Omega Psi Phi.

•Eight of the 15 submissions cited violence. Some accusers took us up on the option to provide further detail via write-in.

A 1962 graduate wrote of her experience pledging Delta Sigma Theta: "A single-burner hotplate was laid on my back and I suffered a third-degree burn that has left a large black circle that is a permanent mark and reminder."

A member of the Marching 100 from 1980 wrote: "I was punched in the chest. I was verbally threatened many times. I heard a girl scream and saw a freshman band sister, saxophone player being dragged across the patch by her hair late one night after band practice."

An alumna who tried to join the Pershing Angels in the mid-80s wrote: "For every day I was online, I was beaten with paddles til my entire body hurt. I was thrown down the steps outside Foote-Hilyer that lead down to the street (Adams). That was the day I dropped line."

•Alpha Phi Alpha was named in five submissions. One was from a current student alleging violence and every other category of abuse we offered as a choice on our form. He says he encountered hazing behaviors among Alphas between five and 10 times, and he has so far only told his friends.

•About half the accusers said they did not report hazing incidents to anyone around the time the incidents occurred. About half said they reported to friends. Every other option, including police and administrators, showed little usage.

Of the people who did report hazing to someone, only one -- a current member of the Marching 100 -- said she got a satisfactory response. More on her later.

•The numbers cited above exclude several responses we threw out for various reasons that seemed to render them statistically invalid. For instance, one current student complained about a fraternity that is not currently registered with FAMU's Office of Student Activities as being "on the yard." It is thus unclear for the moment how such an incident could possibly have taken place, though we've reached out to the student asking for clarification.

I'd like to add one final thought that has little to do with numbers per se. It relates to that present-day Marching 100 member, whose complaint was limited to forms of hazing short of violence. She says she reported the incidents to band staff, her parents, and friends, then got a satisfactory response.

At a time when the Rattler community is mourning a band member who lost his life altogether, this story might almost qualify as welcome news. But let's look again at what this young lady went through.

The student wrote: "I was made fun of. I walked home countless nights because no one would take me home. I was called out of my name everyday and ostracized because I said no. My section leader told people to steal my instrument and things so I would quit. Because I wouldn't be hazed, my section would not let me march on the field and told me I was irrelevant and bad. They also made me give them part of my allocation money. "

If we reach a point as a community where more of the students who find themselves in situations like this get the support they need, that would be great. But even more than that, I'd like FAMU to be a place where such situations simply don't happen.

I've seen several crises and scandals of varying depth at FAMU over the years, but the current hazing fiasco is different. Usually, our problems boil down to whether we're living up to the "excellence" demanded in our school's famous motto.

The hazing crisis calls into question whether we'll live up to the other characteristic that's supposed to define the university's identity. That is to say, can we be more caring toward one another?

Peter McKay, a 1997 FAMU graduate, is co-founder of the news startup Roscoe Labs. A former reporter for the Wall Street Journal and Washington Post, he is a past winner of the Thelma Thurston Gorham Distinguished Alumnus Award from FAMU's journalism school. He is based in New York City. 

Comments

6 comments
Anonymous
Wed Dec 14 2011 12:01
Seems like FAMU's built a cult of hazing and secrecy. Can you step back and realize this is just wrong? That you don't "teach people to care about each other" by beating them? That excuses like no "one was forced" are an embarassment to the whole community? No one wants to be beaten. A man is dead and the FAMU website reads like the cause is a mystery. People want to believe FAMU is a great educational institution, but actually the whole school is sick.
Just Say, NO!!!
Tue Dec 6 2011 03:15
As painful as this is, for ALL to READ and REALIZE, however for anyone to even consider eradicating the MENTALITY and CULTURE of HAZING, one must begin at home...first & foremost, by instilling the self-esteem AND self-confidence to JUST SAY, "No!" to the often powerful "peer pressure" demands for group acceptance by others... After researching 10+years of hazing history, NOT (one) proven case was located...where an individual was physically forced to participate in a hazing ritual.

And, in the largest case thus far in the state of Florida, which involved the University of Miami, where Chad Meredith, a freshman at the University, died in a fraternity related hazing incident on the University of Miami campus. The jury found Chad Meredith, the decedent and victim, 10% at fault.

Loris Boyd
Mon Dec 5 2011 23:43
I am a alumnus of FAMU and really don't like some of what I am hearing. How easy we forget what it was like to be a new student on campus wanting to fit in somewhere but in order to fit in we must go through an "initiation" in order to feel validated by members of that organization. It also made us feel that we have done something great once we made it through. It validated us. In other words hazing was glorified. We just called it an initiation. But harming one another is not what the initiation was to be all about. It was suppose to teach us how to stick together, to depend on each other and to learn how to care about each other. This is what makes you love the organization for life. Now it is no longer about that but about power. Making sure that this person go through what I went through or else they are not valid. You can remember what it did to your self esteem to brag that you made it through and now as alumnus you are bragging to current Rattlers. As they hear your stories they get caught in the fantasy and want to repeat it so that they can tell there stories. So take a 18 year old who made it on one of the most prestigious organization on campus but now have to prove that they belong. How can they go back home and tell everybody that I couldn't make it through the hazing process. Everybody back home have been bragging them being a member. Family and friends making trips to games just to try and find that person on the field among hundreds. People wanting to take your picture. You are performing for everybody including the President of the United States. Can you imagine the pressure to "take it" even though they don't want to because they want to belong. We act as if peer pressure ends when you leave high school but it doesn't. It is just as great on college campuses and apparently age is not always an issue. So don't assume that because they are 18 that they have arrived at adulthood. I was an athlete and even though our initiation was not severe we were made to do things together because they wanted to teach us freshman how to stick together and care for each other. That is what these band members and other organizations should have been teaching not how badly can I beat you and you take it in order to be in MY organization. As much as some of you are saying they knew better I am quite sure that if your daughter or son allowed themselves to go through physical harm to be a part of a organization you would be livid and doing what you can to stop it in every way possible. I know I don't want to be Mr. & Mrs Champion even though I love FAMU with all my heart and soul.
Anonymous
Mon Dec 5 2011 23:17
Stop the stupid hazing rather harmful or not either someone can play an instrument or not why the extra and men who don't mind getting paddled to be apart of a group are /:;(() and followers!
Anonymous
Mon Dec 5 2011 08:03
My only issue is that this survey cannot be verified. I could be a student that was upset about not making a line and make up a hazing allegation. Let's wait FDLE to finish their investigation and get off the band wagon or altleast publish something worthy of space and back by facts.
TheRealPNasty
Mon Dec 5 2011 01:24
@TheRealPNasty here... ummm you need to be dismissed from the University for publishing this filth flarn filth.
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