HAMPTON, Va.
So lured was April Maxwell by the promise of the Black college experience, with its distinct traditions and tight-knit campus life, that she enrolled at Hampton University in 2001 without even visiting the waterfront campus.
A lesbian who is open about her sexual orientation, she arrived eager to join the extended Hampton family.
Instead, “I felt like I was the only gay person on campus — it seemed like nobody was really out,” says the now 24-year-old Maxwell.
She channeled her isolation into organizing a gay support group, but a panel of students and faculty denied it a charter. The panel recently denied a second attempt at chartering Students Promoting Equal Action and Knowledge, headed by underclassmen after Maxwell graduated.
It’s a tug-of-war that’s emerging at other Black schools, where students say outdated rules and homophobia block them from forming the gay campus voice common at majority White institutions.
At Hampton, where rules govern everything from overnight guests to student dress, officials insist they don’t discriminate against gays. They say they’re simply enforcing the regulations on student groups, and there just isn’t space for another one.