Black Teen Wins Essay Contest

    • admin@nie.com
    • Publish Date: Apr 6 2017 10:21AM
    • |
    • Updated Date: Apr 6 2017 10:21AM
Black Teen Wins Essay Contest

A black teenager who wrote about the "unavoidable" racial issues he faces growing up in an affluent, predominantly white Connecticut town has won an essay contest on the topic of white privilege.

Chet Ellis, a 15-year-old sophomore at Staples High School in Westport, described a discussion on getting into college one day during track practice. He wrote that a white friend said he would have no problem because he's black.

"I was stunned," he wrote, "and mumbled something instead of firing back, 'Your parents are third-generation Princeton and your father runs a hedge fund and yet you think my ride is free?'"

The annual essay contest, put on by the town's diversity council and the Westport Library, aims to prompt discussion of multicultural issues in the shoreline community that is 93 percent white. This year's topic stirred some controversy by encouraging high schoolers to describe how they have been touched by white privilege, a term used mainly by liberals that refers to unseen advantages conferred to whites, and not racial minorities. Chet was awarded the USD 1,000 top prize at a ceremony last night.

Living in a place where almost everyone is white, he writes, he wonders how his race affects how he's treated. He writes about being followed around by a manager inside a store and how it felt when a classmate said a racial slur out loud to describe an offensive sign. And he notes the knowing nods a track teammate receives when he explains a loss by telling others, "I mean I was running against two giant black guys." "As a black teen in Westport, race issues in and outside the classroom are unavoidable," he wrote.

His mother, Amanda Freeman, said the family often discusses current events and racial issues at the dinner table and they encouraged him to enter the contest. "It's just about opening the dialogue," said Freeman, a sociology professor at the University of Hartford. "It's hard for him being one of the few African-American students, feeling like you have to speak for everybody.

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