
On April 20, UNC-Chapel Hill students in two African, African American, and Diaspora Studies classes suddenly learned that their professor, Dr. Perry Hall, had died over the weekend. It was a sad, unexpected ending to a semester of sad and unexpected events. Hall was beloved by Black students, who were already under the stress of final-exam season, the coronavirus pandemic, and, in later months, an onslaught of racist state-sanctioned violence.ย
But instead of getting a formal notice of Hallโs death from the university, students found out through informal emails from department heads. Hallโs classes would continue on with a substitute professor.
โNot only were we robbed of an opportunity to grieve, but we were also expected to move on with the class + assignments w/o skipping a beat,โ tweeted recent grad Olivia McPhaul.
McPhaul says the substitute professor, Dr. David Pier, ignored documentation of extra-credit opportunities Hall created to ease the transition to virtual learning for students who didnโt have the resources to complete assignments or were experiencing added stress during the pandemic. According to McPhaul, Pier said it was too much to deal with.
โI took it upon myself to reach out to the chair of the department to explain my grievances and what had happened,โ McPhaul says. โShe then said, โIf you have evidence, you should send that to me and Dr. Pier in order to get that credit.โ But I shouldnโt have even had to do that.โ
UNCโs handling of Hallโs passing raises larger questions about how the university responds to Black student trauma and the effectiveness of its mental health resources.
Tributes from colleagues after Hallโs death noted that he was a โpillar of our departmentโ and an โincredible scholarโ in the national Black studies community. He was a member of the International Journal of Africana Studies’ editorial board, and his work was highly regarded.
โHe contributed a lot to the life of the department,โ says AAAD professor Dr. Kenneth Janken, who worked with Hall for decades. โHe worked on a significant reconfiguration of the major and minor requirements. He also took an important role in the development of a graduate program in our department, which is in its last stages of the approval process. He was consistent and principled and deliberate and considered in his opinion, not to mention kind.โ
Janken says UNCโsย Faculty Council, a governing body representing university faculty members, holds an in memoriam moment of silence for deceased faculty at the end of the school year. The council, along with the College of Arts & Sciences and faculty news publication The Well, posted a memorial for Hall, saying they hope to honor him in person when it is safe to do so.ย
While the AAAD department posted a memorial tribute on its homepage, it took the Black Student Movement sharing a graphic on social media and my article in The Bridge for most people to find out. BSM President Tamiya Troy says itโs โoutrageousโ how many responses theyโve received from alumni, parents, and current students saying they had no idea.
This isnโt the first time Black students at UNC have been left to handle their own mourning and community trauma. On September 25, 2019, UNC BSM hosted a โFallen Tar Heelsโ vigil honoring the people lost from the Black Carolina community: Karriem โEricโ Ahmad Jenkins, Diamond Daniels, and former faculty member Ishna Hall.ย
On June 5, following the murders of Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, Sean Reed, George Floyd, and countless others, UNC BSM, UNC Black Congress, and student government organized a vigil in honor of Black lives. Troy notes that while Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz attended both events, the onus was on students to organize them.ย
In the past school year, several student deaths have been reported by The Daily Tar HeelโWynn Burrus, Madison DeVries, and Patrick Nixon. But there has been no article on Hallโs death.
The university says that when thereโs a faculty or staff death, individual units or departments handle notifications, memorials, and replacements. But given the previous response to faculty death and Hallโs influence in the Black UNC community, students expected broader recognition of his passing.
McPhaul says some of her classmates have checked in with one another in a group message, but her grieving process wouldโve looked much different if she didnโt have familiar faces in the class.
AAAD department chair Dr. Eunice Sahle listed the Counseling and Psychological Services website and hotline in her email informing students of Hallโs death. But CAPS didnโt feel like an option to McPhaul.
โIโve visited CAPS and Campus Health, and I felt like it was never really about me or that I was prioritized,โ says McPhaul, a Black woman in UNCโs mostly white and male computer science program. โWhen I first went to CAPS, it was surrounding the experiences and the trauma that I had endured in the computer science department with my professors, the racism and discrimination and exclusion. Since that experience, I have not returned to CAPS, nor would I have advised other people to.โ
Troy says there are too many hoops students have to jump through to receive the help or accommodations theyโre paying for.
โThe university hasnโt asked students what you need when youโre experiencing a death or when something happens, because they fail to acknowledge it,โ she says.ย
The disconnect between CAPS and students of color, particularly Black students, is evident, though CAPS Director Allen Hamrick OโBarr has made efforts to seek input from BSM and We Wear the Mask, a minority mental health advocacy group. He says CAPS has a strong multicultural program in their training.ย
โThereโs only a limited amount of interaction that weโre going to be able to do with any student just because of the resources and the demand,โ OโBarr says. โItโs a bigger issue in that a lot of the student body wants to have unlimited psychotherapy and we just donโt have the capacity to do it.โ
Although there are Black staff members, most are social work fellows or predoctoral interns from other schools, not psychologists. Since these positions are transient, itโs hard for Black students to find a counselor who works for them and get continuous long-term care.ย
As for grief counseling, there is a COVID-19 focused support group that addresses it at a lower levelโthings like โlosingโ part of the school year and a formal graduation. OโBarr says that they would need to create a specific group for dealing with death.
The university sent out formal emails about maintaining mental health during COVID-19, including one the day after Hallโs death was announced to students. Guskiewicz records weekly video messages checking in on the Carolina community, and visited Zoom classes to discuss what returning to campus in the fall could look like. In light of recent events regarding police brutality, UNC has even sent out emails regarding Carolinaโs commitment to โcampus-wide dialogue, healing, and structural change.โ But they did not mention the psychological toll that white supremacy and widespread death has on Black students or what will be done to rectify it.ย
Dr. Hallโs students arenโt just managing exams and trying to navigate an unforeseen pandemicโthey are grieving the loss of a man that advocated for them, and UNC needs to advocate for its Black students. At a university that claims to be for the people, the peopleโs needs seem to be rarely listened to.ย ย
An earlier version of this piece appeared in The Bridge, a media outlet created by UNC-CH and Duke students to share the voices of women of color at these institutions.ย Comment on this story at [email protected].
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I’ve worked for the school system for over 15 years I am an African American teacher. I have watched racial biases within the school system which is embreded within White society in regards to the Death of Professor Dr. Hall employed by UNC. Racial biases within the School system, example a death of a teacher’s love one or their beloved pet, higher ups would get together to collect money, cards and gifts etc., for the teacher who is White who sufffered loss. Then this Professor Dr. Hall those Head Instructors did not inform the Black community of his loss. I have had family members who have passed away, there were no cards, no money, not even an gift or an encouraging word. It is as if black lives do not matter. In court room a black man can be innocent but because of him being black he is more likely to be given a guilty verdict than a white man because racial bias within our society.
I remember other professors that have passed and I thought it was not well publicized. It was handle by their respective departments whether they were white or black.
This just sounds like perpetual whining, raising a whole generation to cry unfair over every single thing, it’s disgusting.