
The Memorial Arch at Oberlin College, alma mater of actress Lena Dunham (inset).
Kent State this is not!
Gastronomically correct students at an ultra-liberal Ohio college are in an uproar because the cafeteria food isnt ethnically accurate enough.
Students at Oberlin College are so angered by the insensitive and culturally appropriative offerings at their Dascomb Dining Hall that they are filling screeds of protest in the school newspaper and even demanded a meeting with Campus Dining Service officials and the college president.
At issue are foods such as General Tsos chicken being served with steamed chicken instead of fried which is not authentically Chinese, and simply weird, one student bellyached.
Others were up in arms over Banh Mi Vietnamese sandwiches served with coleslaw instead of pickled vegetables on ciabatta bread rather than traditional French baguette.
It was ridiculous, Diep Nguyen, a freshman who is a Vietnam native, told The Oberlin Review, the school newspaper.
How could they just throw out something completely different and label it as another countrys traditional food?
Not only that, but the sushi rice was undercooked in a way that was, according to one Japanese student, disrespectful of her culture.
That student, Tomoyo Joshi, a junior from Japan, was very offended by this flagrant violation of her rice.
When youre cooking a countrys dish for other people, including ones who have never tried the original dish before, youre also representing the meaning of the dish as well as its culture, Joshi told the Review.
So if people not from that heritage take food, modify it and serve it as authentic, it is appropriative, she said.
Oberlins black student union joined in the food fray this month by staging a protest and petition against the grub being offered at Afrikan Heritage House, an on-campus dorm.
The dorms cafeteria wasnt serving enough vegan and vegetarian options, and had failed to make fried chicken a permanent feature on the Sunday night menu, the school newspaper reported.
The petition also recommends the reduction of cream used in dishes, because Black American food doesnt have much cream in it, according to the Review.
Student gripes are even getting the attention of at least one national organization, at least relating to the schools inclusion of beef in a traditional Indian tandoori.
Consuming beef was considered sacrilegious among Hindus, blasted Rajan Zed, president of the Universal Society of Hinduism, who has demanded meetings with school officials, according to the Chronicle-Telegram.
Campus dietitian Michele Gross told the Review this week that so far, the first meeting between college officials and dyspeptic students went well, and changes are being implemented to address all concerns.
Oberlin alumni include Nobel and Pulitzer Prize winners, and celebs such as Lena Dunham.