Black Churches Offer College Scholarships To Students At Michael Brown's Alma Mater

Black Churches Offer Scholarships To Students At Michael Brown's Alma Mater
WELLSTON, MO - AUGUST 21:Students leave Normandy High School at the end of the school day as the drama of the killing of 18-year-old Michael Brown by white police officer Darren Wilson on August 9 in Ferguson, MO, plays itself out on Thursday, August 21, 2014, in Wellston, MO. Normandy is a statistically troubled high school that graduated Michael Brown. The school has the difficult task of raising young black males in an area notorious for racial profiling and unequal treatment at the hands of law enforcement.(Photo by Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
WELLSTON, MO - AUGUST 21:Students leave Normandy High School at the end of the school day as the drama of the killing of 18-year-old Michael Brown by white police officer Darren Wilson on August 9 in Ferguson, MO, plays itself out on Thursday, August 21, 2014, in Wellston, MO. Normandy is a statistically troubled high school that graduated Michael Brown. The school has the difficult task of raising young black males in an area notorious for racial profiling and unequal treatment at the hands of law enforcement.(Photo by Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

WELLSTON, Mo. (RNS) They filed into the gym Monday (Jan. 12) for an assembly about graduation and applying for colleges — an intentionally vague description that wouldn’t be out of the ordinary for a senior class.

Instead, the seniors at Normandy High School learned that full-tuition scholarships would be given to 11 of them in honor of Michael Brown, who graduated just days before he was fatally shot by a Ferguson police officer.

Brown's death — and the subsequent grand jury decision not to charge the white officer with his death — set off protests and heightened racial tensions coast to coast, followed by a similar case of a unarmed black man on Staten Island who died in a police chokehold.

“The way we deal with this situation is we breathe life into you,” said George T. French, president of Miles College in Birmingham, Ala., which is offering two of the scholarships. “We believe in you, Normandy High School seniors.”

More than a dozen local and national church leaders sat in folding chairs on the gym floor, inside a high-poverty school south of Ferguson where opportunity runs short and paying for college doesn’t come easily for most.
The scholarships would cover four years’ tuition at colleges and universities operated by each of the three African-American Methodist denominations: African Methodist Episcopal, African Methodist Episcopal Zion and Christian Methodist Episcopal. And the scholarships would target not necessarily the top students, but those who want to go to college and wouldn’t otherwise have the chance.

The idea came from a meeting in North Carolina last month. Leaders were lamenting that, unlike during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, the religious community at large hasn’t played much of a role in the Ferguson movement, said the Rev. Jamal Bryant of Baltimore, who was at that meeting and who has been part of some Ferguson protests.

“This is a young people’s movement,” Bryant said. “We figured the best way to help support that was to educate them.”

Sitting with church leaders were Michael Brown Sr., and his wife, Cal Brown. Their foundation, Michael Brown Chosen for Change, is partnering with the denominations in awarding the scholarships. Doing this “means a lot,” Brown Sr. said.

Normandy seniors must apply for the scholarships. Fort Valley State University in Georgia and Texas College are the other colleges offering the full rides. They will be awarded at graduation in May.

Ahniya Gilmore said she’ll be applying. “Some people don’t get the opportunity for scholarships,” she said. “It tells us that we can make it.”

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