Parents back headmistress of £40,000-a-year Kent girls’ boarding school in racism row

Parents back headmistress of £40,000-a-year Kent girls’ boarding school in racism row after students demand she apologise for saying the word ‘negro’ in assembly

  • Samantha Price, head of Benenden School, used term in a speech on racism 
  • Was trying to show how language around black people had changed over time
  • Parents said she shouldn’t apologise for educating pupils about history of racism

Samantha Price, head of Benenden School, used the term during a speech on Black History Month to show how language around black people had changed 

Parents have backed the headmistress of a £40,000-a-year Kent girls’ boarding school after students demanded she apologise for using the word ‘negro’ in a school assembly.

Samantha Price, head of Benenden School, which Princess Anne attended, used the term during a speech on Black History Month to show how language around black people had changed. 

Afterwards she received complaints from some senior girls who claimed it was as offensive as the n-word and her use of it could give licence for other pupils to do the same.

In response, she said: ‘The original name contains an offensive word and by using this word in this context I was attempting to show how far language around black people has come since then.

‘However, in hindsight I recognise it was not necessary to use the specific word and I accept that by using this word at all I have caused offence to some pupils. Clearly, this was never my intention and I unreservedly apologise for that error.’ 

But parents leapt to her defence and said it was not necessary to apologise for trying to educate her pupils about the history of racial inequality.

One parent, a leading surgeon of Asian ethnicity, called Mrs Price a ‘wonderful headmistress’.

‘We live in a difficult age, with society trying to rationalise and deal with some of the very troubling aspects of human history,’ he told The Times.

‘Language and the use of certain words have certainly changed over time, but I am 100 per cent certain that Sam Price would not have used the word negro for anything other than to promote education and debate.’

Mrs Price explained how, when it began in 1926, Black History Month was known as ‘Negro History Week’ in America.

Another parent, who also asked to remain anonymous, said Mrs Price was only quoting historical fact.

Benenden marks Black History Month every October. It was founded by black historian Carter G. Woodson and was originally in the second week of February.

Afterwards she received complaints from some senior girls at the school (pic) who said it was as offensive as the n-word and her use of it could give licence for other pupils to do the same

Afterwards she received complaints from some senior girls at the school (pic) who said it was as offensive as the n-word and her use of it could give licence for other pupils to do the same

There has been an increase in activism at UK schools sparked by the Black Lives Matter protests in the US.

Earlier this month, a boarding school renamed a house honouring the 18th century colonial ruler Clive of India after a series of demonstrations.

Clive House at Haberdashers’ Adams in Newport, Shropshire, will bear the name of celebrated war poet Wilfred Owen, who lived nearby in Oswestry, instead.

Past and present members of the school, founded in 1656, raised their concerns about Clive House after the death of George Floyd in the United States.

In a statement, the school, which charges boarders £12,000 a year, said: ‘By renaming Clive House, we believe that we will be contributing, in a small but useful way, to recognising and redressing some of the injustices inflicted on ethnic minority communities and their predecessors.’

Robert Clive, who lived near Market Drayton, was a controversial military officer and an official of the East India Trading Company.

It comes amid growing tensions about Britain’s colonial past, sparked by global outcry following the death of unarmed black man George Floyd at the hands of a US policeman.