Va. 7th Grader Told to Cut His Locs if He Wanted to Stay in School

0
475

[ad_1]

dreadlocks5n7web

Isaiah Freeman, 13, was told he would have to cut his hair even though his family pulled it above his ears. 

Courtesy Freeman Family.

A seventh-grade student at a private school in central Virginia was told he must cut his dreadlocks if he wanted to remain in school, according to WTVR.

Isaiah Freeman, 13, was pulled out of West End Christian School in Hopewell, Va., by his father when officials threatened to discipline his son for the hairstyle saying he would receive a “referral” every day he showed up to school with the locs.

The rub is that Isaiah has had his hair in the style since he began at the school in third grade. Yet, the school said the hair was too long even though his family pulled his hair above his ears.

“I think it’s a form of not being culturally aware, a form of stereotyping,” dad Shawn Freeman told the Daily News on Friday. He describes his son as a well-mannered young man who consistently gets good grades and wants to be a geologist when he grows up.

Freeman is currently looking for another school for his son. He told the News he could not believe the school began enforcing the rule three months into the term as well as several years after Isaiah entered the school.

“They won’t give me a legitimate reason why this is an issue now,” Freeman says.

West End Christian School principal Amy Griggs said they have asked the same of other male students and if they excused Isaiah, it could open the door to students challenging other policies. She insists that it is about the length, and not the style of the hair.

“The rule in our handbook states that hair length is to be no longer than the middle of the neck, halfway below the ears, and not below the eyebrows,” she said to the News. “Even from the beginning of the school year, Isaiah’s hair has become considerably longer. This has never been about his hairstyle, only the length.”

“As he gets older people are uncomfortable with him having dreadlocks and getting older and bigger,” Shawn Freeman told WTVR. “It’s an issue of people feeling uncomfortable with a young black male having dreadlocks and having a certain persona of negativity.”

Griggs reportedly said after speaking with the parents again, the School Board is considering diversity training and possibly changing the hair policy for next year, but Isaiah will not be there.

Read more at WTVR and the New York Daily News.

[ad_2]