Colgate Students Delve Into Diversity
Chris Nickels
Issue date: 1/21/05 Section: News
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Spending the last weekend of winter vacation in a foreign place with no television, no radio and shaky cell phone reception sounds like the makings of a pretty horrible time. Yet a group of Colgate students who did this very thing found it to be an enlightening, innovative and altogether magnificent experience. These students, along with several faculty members, participated in a diversity initiative called Skin Deep.
Skin Deep is no weekend excursion. It is an intense workshop that takes members of the Colgate community and forces them to confront the issues of social oppression, identification and conformity. Over 26 students participated, each bringing a unique and personal perspective to the program.
Many discussions explored the issue of diversity on the Colgate campus.
"We discussed what our 'ideal Colgate' would be, the barriers that would prevent aspects of it from occurring, and how we could overcome those barriers," first-year participant Elizabeth Bubriski said. "We talked a lot about the problem of racism here, and how often so many people believe that it's not an issue, when really there are so many things daily that they do themselves that contribute to this problem."
The students involved felt a sense of security and trust when they discussed these sometimes painfully sensitive issues.
"People truly opened up and let us all into their hearts and their past," sophomore Amanda Pedraja said. "A lot of times looking at someone's exterior you automatically assume so much about them, but this retreat taught me that there are so many different levels to people. There were tears shed and laughs shared, but in the end, I know I learned something from each one of those people. Not something about them, but an individual lesson they each taught me, unknown to them."
Skin Deep was held at the Summer Hill Country Inn in Sherburne, a place uncannily ideal for the event. The Inn generates its own power supply, grows and prepares its own food and its decorum consists of only hand-made furnishings. Very few electronics are allowed.
Skin Deep is no weekend excursion. It is an intense workshop that takes members of the Colgate community and forces them to confront the issues of social oppression, identification and conformity. Over 26 students participated, each bringing a unique and personal perspective to the program.
Many discussions explored the issue of diversity on the Colgate campus.
"We discussed what our 'ideal Colgate' would be, the barriers that would prevent aspects of it from occurring, and how we could overcome those barriers," first-year participant Elizabeth Bubriski said. "We talked a lot about the problem of racism here, and how often so many people believe that it's not an issue, when really there are so many things daily that they do themselves that contribute to this problem."
The students involved felt a sense of security and trust when they discussed these sometimes painfully sensitive issues.
"People truly opened up and let us all into their hearts and their past," sophomore Amanda Pedraja said. "A lot of times looking at someone's exterior you automatically assume so much about them, but this retreat taught me that there are so many different levels to people. There were tears shed and laughs shared, but in the end, I know I learned something from each one of those people. Not something about them, but an individual lesson they each taught me, unknown to them."
Skin Deep was held at the Summer Hill Country Inn in Sherburne, a place uncannily ideal for the event. The Inn generates its own power supply, grows and prepares its own food and its decorum consists of only hand-made furnishings. Very few electronics are allowed.
2008 Woodie Awards