Georgia principal blames racial remarks at graduation event on 'the devil'
Nancy Gordeuk says the devil was in the house when she commented about only the black people leaving during a graduation ceremony
Nancy Gordeuk of the TNT Academy in Georgia. Photograph: Screengrab
A high school principal has sparked even more confusion after she tried to explain a racially charged comment she made during a graduation ceremony by saying it was prompted by the devil.
The audience at the graduation for TNT Academy school in Georgia erupted in anger on Friday after principal Nancy Gordeuk saw some students and parents heading for the exit early and said loudly from the podium: Look whos leaving all the black people.
Gordeuk, the principal and founder of the alternative private school in Stone Mountain, Atlanta, later made several attempts to apologize for her outburst, but appeared to compound the situation.
She reportedly emailed parents to say: A terrible mistake on my part of the graduation ceremony on Friday night. The devil was in the house and came out from my mouth. I deeply apologize for my racist comment and hope that forgiveness in [sic] in your hearts.
Parents later posted the statement on social media.
Georgia authorities are now under pressure to intervene, while Gordeuk has reportedly received hate mail and death threats.
She told local television news outlets she was trying to persuade people to stay for a speech by a student, telling CBS: The statement was not made as a racist remark; my concern was this student trying to make his speech and when I look over all I see is black people moving. The TV station also put a longer statement from her online.
Several members of the audience recorded cellphone video of Gordeuks remarks. She can be heard saying she caused a mix-up in the program, where she forgot to list the valedictorians speech, and urged people to stay for it, asking them not to be rude.
But some attending the event, held at a church, later said people were walking out because of tactless remarks the principal had already made.
Nancy Gordeuk has not responded to a request from the Guardian for comment and the telephone at TNT Academy was not being answered on Monday afternoon.
Comment is being sought from Travis Gordeuk.
TNT Academy serves as a support center for children whose families choose to educate them mainly at home, rather than in the public school system, but use the school for teaching support, social activities, accredited testing and awarding credits towards a high school diploma.
The school is accredited by the Georgia Accreditation Commission (GAC), an independent body officially recognized by several state education agencies.
Phillip Morris, executive director of the GAC, said TNT is inspected by a consultant every three years and was last visited and re-accredited in 2013.
He told the Guardian he was receiving many complaints about Gordeuks behavior but the commission was not in a position to act officially until it received a complaint or allegation directly from a stakeholder, such as a parent of a child at the school.
It should be handled by the school board. This lady owns the school, so her board is going to be people she appoints. That will have to be something we look at carefully. The matter is informally under review at the moment, he said.
The school labels itself as a non-traditional education center. Its website literature features poor grammar and typographical errors.
Obviously things were out of control at this event, which is not acceptable, said Graham Lowe, vice chairman of the GAC board of directors.
Its unfortunate. The fact that she is the founder, that makes it real sticky, that probably gives her more input ... It will first be an internal matter, whether it will be to get rid of her or cut her salary for a couple of months, or what, I do not know and I dont want to guess ... But they need to get it worked out, he added.
Lowe noted from the video that there was a large audience for the event with lots of young people in caps and gowns preparing to receive their high school graduations.
So they must be doing a good job of something, he said.
He said many establishments such as TNT Academy had emerged in the US, including Georgia, in recent times to cater to the many families who prefer to educate their children at home but also seek part-time support from professionals, and turn to such fee-paying centers.
Lousy "alternative" school. I hope this incident blows-UP and the "alternative" school is shut-down. For the children's sake... send them to a REAL school with full time teachers.
I don't know that the school was lousy. I have no data on the students' knowledge, performance, anything like that.
The principal said something very stupid in the heat of the moment. It revealed the way her mind works, and that probably makes it such that she can't go on in top leadership in the future. But if the school is producing decent results, then it shouldn't be shut, just make a staff change.
You support vouchers for private christian schools. Good for you.
Bullshit.
When my parents sent me to Catholic parochial school, they had to pay for every goddam penny of it out of their own pocket because you Bible-thumping Protestants were squawking about "separation of Church & State" and you didn't want ANY of your school taxes going to support the parochial school, even though my parents also paid school taxes and were only looking for help with the cost of the bus to haul us to school. (Besides, it was the Baby Boom, and if all us kids who went to Catholic School went to public school instead, the public school would've had to build THREE more schools & staffs & teachers just to hold us all. Paying for the buses was letting you off cheap, especially since we all paid taxes too and weren't getting any benefit from it whatsoever.
But then when I was in 5th Grade (1962/63), the Supreme Court ruled that you couldn't recite the Lord's Prayer in public school. Well that's fine by me, because I didn't want to recite the Protestant version of the Lord's Prayer anyway. And I certainly didn't think it was right or proper to force my Jewish friends to just stand there politely while everybody else recited a Christian prayer.
So the heck with your vouchers and other scams you've concocted to siphon away public shool taxes to support YOUR version of Christianity. I personally experienced anti-Catholic, protestant bigotry on this very issue when I was a kid. So it'll be a cold day in hell before I ever agree for my taxes to support YOUR Christian school.
If you want to attend private Christian school, pay for it yourself out of your own goddam pocket like we had to do.