Birmingham School Apologizes, Teacher Didn’t Think It Was a ‘Real Big Deal’ to Paint Bullet Wound on Black 7-Year-Old’s Forehead
Birmingham School Apologizes, Teacher Didn’t Think It Was a ‘Real Big Deal’ to Paint Bullet Wound on Black 7-Year-Old’s Forehead
By Lauren Floyd -October 21, 201901212
A Black mom in Alabama called out a Birmingham school when her son was sent home with a bullet wound painted on his forehead that she later found out the drama teacher painted.
Zakiya Milhouse shared the photo of her son Amonn Jackson, a second-grader at Phillips Academy in downtown Birmingham, on Facebook Tuesday.
“So they did this in drama class and my boy said the teacher said it’s like he got shot,” Milhouse said in the Facebook post. “I don’t like that shit ! I don’t care if it’s Halloween or NOT ! A bullet hole in the head 🤬🤬”
Milhouse told Birmingham News the wound looked real in person and that drawing it on a Black boy’s forehead was inappropriate.
“This actually happens to our black young men,” she said. “If you saw it in person, it looked real.”
The 7-year-old’s mother told Birmingham News she spoke to the teacher after she saw the makeup and he apologized.
“He didn’t think it was a real big deal,” she said. “He said he did paint on different kids, such as black eyes. He said was going to take it out of his lesson plan.”
Birmingham City Schools said in a statement Birmingham News obtained that the student was “participating in a theater class unit on stage, film, and special effects” when he chose the face.
“The teacher sent permission forms home with students making parents aware of the unit and requesting permission to put makeup on students,” the district said.
“Students were asked if they would like the makeup on their hands or faces, and this student chose his face,” the district said. “Students are never forced to participate, and they had the option to skip a design.”