Anonymous wrote:Class of 1989 here.
I vividly remember being auctioned off in a “freshman slave day” back in 1984 or 1985. It was a fundraiser type of thing.
I think there’s a twist on this where seniors are the ones who are auctiones.
This was in Ohio back in the mid-1980s.
Wondering if it was common.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I once went on a sleepover, and the next day went to Quaker meeting with the family (this would have been in the '80's). Their meeting was having a fundraiser and the kids stood on a stage and an "auctioneer" described what they said they could do such as baby sit or mow your lawn and people bid on them.
It's mind boggling to me that people thought this was OK, and particularly in a denomination that had such a strong abolitionist presence and commitment to social justice. But that's what happened!
I’ve been to auctions for schools in present day where they auctioned off services including babysitting, portraits, photography, etc. is auctioning off services that have been donated wrong?
Anonymous wrote:Disgusting!! This makes me feel terrible all over again. I am AA and was in 9th grade in an all white school and my social studies teacher had us reenact slavery and guess who got to be the slave? They all looked at me and he told me to be the slave. I wish I could just disappear and stayed home from school from an "illness" the next two days trying to avoid that class. The teacher was a vet and a racist civil war enthusiast.
Anonymous wrote:No, but I think I've seen it in a movie or something because it sounds vaguely familiar.