The New Haven Register reports
NEW HAVEN — Yale Law School is looking further into a controversy over a student’s emailed party invitation, after the student was urged by administrators and other students to apologize for what some considered racially insensitive language.
Trent Colbert, a second-year law student from Seattle who is part Cherokee, sent the email Sept. 15 to about 20 members of the Native American Law Students Association, most of whom he said are friends.
But he said someone then posted a screenshot of his invitation on a chat board seen by all second-year law students, and several complained to the administration.
A.J. Hudson, a second-year student and member of the Black Students Law Association, said “Trap House,” which originated as a description of a place to buy drugs, is another way of saying crackhouse and is used colloquially among Blacks, but was racially insensitive in an email.
Rather than sending out an email protest, Hudson said, he and others started “a teaching campaign where multiple people explained why they word trap house in the context of that email was offensive and hurtful to people of color.” The intent was “really giving people a chance to talk about it and start a conversation.” But he said Colbert wouldn’t participate or apologize.
Colbert said he received just one email from students and that he offered to speak to anyone individually. “I said my DM’s [direct messages] were open and no one DM’d me,” he said. When administrators asked him to apologize he refused because “the way they were framing that apology, it sounded like they would want me to admit that it was a racist email, which isn’t something that I admit.”
“I still didn’t understand what people were offended by and no one would answer me when I asked,” Colbert said of his first meeting with Associate Dean Ellen Cosgrove and Yaseen Eldik, director of diversity in the law school’s Student Affairs Department.
“So part of that was them telling me to the effect that people were offended by the term trap house and they explained to me in this long-winded form about frat boys in the South listening to trap music and putting charcoal on their faces,” he said.
Source: https://www.nhregister.com/news/article/Yale-Law-School-looking-into-controversy-over-a-16553038.php