The site council of Patrick Henry High school postponed a vote Thursday on whether to change the school's name after two hours of heated debate.
"I believe we need more time to review if the process was followed by those for the name change," said Yusuf Abdullah, school principal and site council member.
Abdullah's announcement came after the alumni opposing the name change, which was put forward by students and staff, said due process was not followed. The site council vote is a key step forward in the multilayered name-change process.
A group of students and staff has raised objections to being associated with Patrick Henry — a Revolutionary War-era political leader and a slave owner. Another group representing school alumni is opposing the name change, arguing that "one cannot rewrite history" and citing the "heavy cost" involved.
At least 10 members, or two-thirds of the site council members, must vote in favor of the name change for it to be approved. If the change is approved, the council needs to send at least three proposed new names along with a cost plan to Minneapolis Schools Superintendent Ed Graff for his approval or disapproval. Topping the list of possible names: Unity, Liberty, Victory, Freedom and Union. Graff would then send no more than three names to the Minneapolis school board for a final decision.
This was the second time the vote was delayed. At an earlier meeting, the site council pushed the vote to Thursday after alumni said they hadn't been informed about the proposal.
Reckoning with history
More than 250 people packed the school's gymnasium for the meeting Thursday, with speakers taking turns arguing that the move was either an unnecessary burden or an important change that would distance the school from a slaveholder.
"We all agree it [slavery] was wrong," said Kathleen Harasyn, a 1985 graduate of the school and opponent of the change. "But why are we changing things because of something that happened in the past?"