I Went to UC Berkeley and Apparently Saw More Black People Than Anybody Ever Has There

I recently got back from attending a race and policy symposium sponsored by the Students of Color in Public Policy from the University of California, Berkeleyโ€™s Goldman School of Public Policy. I had the distinct pleasure of being the keynote speaker for their conference, titled, โ€œReclaiming Our Time: The Importance of Identity in Policymaking.โ€ Suggested…

I recently got back from attending a race and policy symposium sponsored by the Students of Color in Public Policy from the University of California, Berkeleyโ€™s Goldman School of Public Policy. I had the distinct pleasure of being the keynote speaker for their conference, titled, โ€œReclaiming Our Time: The Importance of Identity in Policymaking.โ€

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Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach
Stefon Diggs and Cardi B Viral Boat Video Prompts Response from Patriots Coach

I was excited to attend for a couple reasons: 1) While Iโ€™ve been to Northern California and Oakland in particular several times, Iโ€™ve never been to the campus of Berkeley, and considering its status among U.S. colleges and universities, I wanted to see the school; 2) Iโ€™ve never had the opportunity to keynote a conference before.

While Iโ€™ve been on more panels than you can shake a stick at and have been part of lots of Q&A-type forums, especially about VSB, this was my first opportunity to build a discussion from the ground up. I like to think that I did a good job, and I really enjoyed the opportunity. Shouts to the school for bringing me out and Veronica Cummings for being such an awesome host and liaison. โ€™Twas truly a joyful, joyful experience.

Now, Iโ€™ve had the opportunity to visit several top-tier, elite institutions over the years. Usually the events are sponsored by student groups of color, so while I will see lots of minorities at these events, the campuses themselves look fairly white, or at least nonblack. UC Berkeley has a sizable Asian population (according to its websiteโ€™s fall enrollment statistics, about 33 percent of the entire student body is Asian), but the black/African-American population is about 3 percent, or just under 1,400 students. On a campus of 41,000 students, that looks and feels paltry.

I knew this going in and was also informed ahead of time that it would feel entirely devoid of blackness roughly everywhere Iโ€™d go on campus. So imagine my surprise when I got there and I saw black folks everywhere. Literally, the moment I checked into my hotel room, located directly across the street from the law school, I saw a crew of black folks walking down the streetโ€”then some more, different people for sure. I met up with my host for the weekend and we went to get lunch, and I told her Iโ€™d seen lots of black folks already (compared with expectations), which threw me off.

As soon as we left lunch and headed to the class she was teaching, which I had the pleasure of guest lecturing (though it turned into guest โ€œkeeping it all the way realโ€), we walked by the campusโ€™s main hub, and all I heard blaring was some Trey Songz, and it seemed like all of the black students were hanging out with full PA system in tow, sharing the best of Sirius XMโ€™s The Heat with Berkeleyโ€™s campus.

I was, of course, lost. Because here I was, going to what Iโ€™d been preparing for as a place with very little in the way of blackness, and all I saw and heard was blackness everywhere. In fact, the whole time I visited, I kept seeing black folks here, there and everywhere. In fact, I must have seen them all because I didnโ€™t feel like I was on a campus devoid of blackness at all.

I told my host, Veronica, that I must have seen literally all of the black folks on campus, in different parts, doing different things, etc. At one point she started to refer to me as โ€œBlack Gravityโ€ because she was confused at how many black folks seemed to be coming out of the woodwork. That happened when Iโ€™d mention to others how many black folks I saw. There were stunned looks, like, โ€œWhere?โ€ Apparently, seeing black folks all over isnโ€™t a thing.

Now, I know the percentages, so Iโ€™m not pretending that the campus is awash with melanated individuals throwing up fists for black power because all they want is their freedom. What I am saying is that I went to one of those places where I presumed that Iโ€™d feel extra black by virtue of the lack of existence of many black folks, and somebody must have sent a memo in advance of my assumption because it was blacks on blacks on blacks for two straight days. Which I appreciated. It made my experience at UC Berkeley feel full. Of color.

So while I know that UC Berkeley is a pretty nonblack institution (probably on par with most universities of its like), I was ever so happy to see so many black folks that I stopped feeling it necessary to speak to every one. Or hit them with the head nod. At some point, I minded my own business and kept it pushing.

It wasnโ€™t quite A Different Worldโ€”more Grown-ishโ€”but black enough for me.

To all the black folks at UC Berkeley, I see(nt) you. Now, if you could just come out more often for the folks who actually go to school with you ...

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