Thursday, March 28, 2024

Four of Five Kennesaw State Cheerleaders Who Knelt During Anthem Didn’t Make This Year’s Squad

Kennesaw State University cheerleaders
Kennesaw State University cheerleaders

*Seven teens who made Kennesaw State’s cheerleading squad last year did not make the cut for the upcoming school year. Four of them were part of the “Kennesaw Five,” who knelt during the national anthem last year, according to KPLC TV.

According to the outlet, the cuts were made in May, but news of it only surfaced recently with the start of the school’s 2018-19 football season. KSU told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that 95 people tried out for the 52-member squad this year. Only 61 people tried out last year.

“While they are disappointed, they’ve accepted it and went on with their academic lives,” Davante Lewis, the spokesman for the cheerleaders who knelt, told the AJC.

Even so, “Kennesaw Five” member Toomia Dean told WXIA her protest “played a role” in the decision and this is “what happens when you take a stand.”

“I know the people who made it. I know their skills and I know my skills. But I don’t think it was a skills-based thing. Not to say I’m amazing or anything, but I know my skills and what I had,” Dean told the TV station.

The cheerleaders who knelt, all of them black women, did so in support of a national movement sparked by former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick in 2016. His goal was to raise awareness of police brutality affecting African Americans in the United States.

Like Kaepernick, the cheerleaders faced backlash. The university responded to their first protest by changing its rules and keeping all cheerleaders in the tunnel during the anthem.

The school later reversed that policy.

In a series of text messages, Cobb County Sheriff Neil Warren bragged about pressuring KSU’s president into keeping the cheerleaders off the field, according to the AJC. That led to student protests on campus.

According to a report released by the University System of Georgia, KSU did not follow its guidance that protesting during the national anthem was constitutionally protected free speech that should be allowed unless it caused a disruption.

A month after that report came out, school president Sam Olens announced plans to resign.

Pamela Whitten, who was hired as KSU’s president in June, told the AJC she is willing to meet with the cheerleaders and students involved in last year’s protests.

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