Texas NAACP, students file federal civil rights complaint over UT-Austin's 'Eyes of Texas'
by Kate McGee, Texas Tribune
The Texas chapter of the NAACP, along with the civil rights organizations University of Texas at Austin chapter and a group of anonymous students, has filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Educations Office of Civil Rights alleging UT-Austin is creating a hostile environment for Black students by continuing to play the The Eyes of Texas alma mater song at university events.
The complaint, filed Friday morning, alleges that Black students have been denied full benefits of Longhorn student life because the song is an official part of the university, despite its racially offensive origin, context and meaning. The song premiered at a minstrel show in the early 1900s where students likely wore blackface. Despite pushback, university officials have said they are going to keep the song as their alma mater, concluding in a report issued earlier this year that the song had no racist intent.
The complaint, provided to
The Texas Tribune by the filers, says the university has failed to respond to racial harassment against Black students and others who oppose the song, violating Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, and argues the universitys decision to create a separate marching band for students who do not want to play The Eyes of Texas violates equal protections afforded under the Fourteenth Amendment.
This past spring, the UT-Austin Butler School of Music announced the creation of a new band in which students would not be required to play the song after members of the Longhorn Band refused to play it last fall due to its history and origins. Students in the Longhorn band are required to play the song.
Read more:
https://www.texastribune.org/2021/09/07/naacp-ut-austin-eyes-of-texas/