Monday, November 18, 2013

Nov. 18: It's All Greek to Me

An article in the IDS last week, “Another Drunken Saturday,” has received a lot of attention for being inflammatory toward the Greek system. It wasn’t. This will be.

A gross example of obstruction of justice occurred last week. Here are the facts.

An article ran in the IDS detailing the Saturday morning of an Indiana University student. The student was under-age and a member of a sorority. The article showed her consumption of alcohol, both within the context of fraternities and also at family tailgates.

Here is the reaction. The Greek system responded with a twitter campaign, meant to show the great things that members of the fraternities and sororities across campus do, both for one another and for the university as a whole.

The problem is that the members of the Greek system decided to make the article about them, rather than about the social issue that the writer raises. Drinking culture is deeply ingrained in the IU community. Anyone who goes here knows that drinking is not only popular, but in many cases is a social expectation.  An exposé meant to shed light on the situation of excessive drinking, both underage and otherwise, is something that was not only well done by the writer, but also incredibly important and necessary for the community as a whole, not just the Greek community.

Indiana University has focused an incredible amount of attention in recent weeks to the way alcohol is handled on campus, especially in response to two freshmen who, earlier in the semester, died, seemingly from alcohol related incidences. The Greek system has been very responsive to this, attempting to limit the amount of hard alcohol permitted at their parties, and other self-imposed restrictions. But their biggest opportunity to come out looking like they cared about the safety of not only their people but also the college as a whole resulted in a sad dropping of the ball.

Instead of accepting the article for what it was, the Greek community decided that it was a personal attack. The IDS was accused of being anti-Greek. While the Opinions staff has had something of a history of coming out against fraternity and sorority life, the news and features departments don’t really have the vehicles with which to be overtly biased. This argument blames the newspaper, rather than the reaction to it.

It is also important to note the distinction between the Greek system and its members. When saying that there is a drinking problem within the Greek system, that does not automatically infer that every member of every house is a raging alcoholic. It simply means that, as a collective body, the organization as a whole does not do nearly enough to promote healthy and safe alcohol consumption.

All too common this week has been the notion of “I know tons of really great people in the Greek system.” By saying this, people are not helping to dissuade the stereotype. It is, rather, perpetuating the notion that those two things are mutually exclusive, which was never addressed. Whether they would like to believe it or not, drinking is most definitely a piece of what fraternities and sororities do. It is not who they are, though. Instead of jumping to remind everyone of that, the organization should own up, appreciate what the article was trying to say, and do what it can to help the university improve.

The newspaper article last week had the potential to open a lot of eyes to the scary drinking activities that go too far on this campus. It had the opportunity to raise awareness of just how wide-spread an issue this is. It had the chance to cause a very real change for the better in the way we understand drinking on our campus. Instead, it was turned into an opportunity for hurt feelings and hostility.


Members of the Greek system are extremely embarrassed after the article. And they should be. But they are embarrassed for the wrong reasons.

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