- LOS ANGELES TIMES
Thursday, February 4, 1999
- Principal Had Sought Aid in Confronting Bias
Schools: Administrator who said two Latinos beat him
contacted the Anti-Defamation League last month. Parents
attending meeting say they are not connected to the
incident.
By MICHAEL LUO, ANDREW BLANKSTEIN, Times Staff Writers
A Panorama City elementary school principal who said he was beaten unconscious by
anti-white assailants had asked the Anti-Defamation League last month for help in
dealing with discrimination he was experiencing at the school, a lawyer for the league
said Wednesday.
The attack brought reactions from all corners Wednesday, as Latino parents protested
that they were not connected to it, even questioning Principal Norman Bernstein's
account, and others described racial tensions that apparently led to his appeal to the
league.
Police have said they are investigating the attack as a hate crime, perhaps motivated by
discontent over Bernstein's efforts to scale back bilingual education at the predominantly
Latino campus.
But parents at Burton Street Elementary School--including some who have called for the
principal's dismissal, an administrator said--met at the school Wednesday and protested
that they were not behind the incident.
"There is no relation between the crime and bilingual education at the school," said one of
the parents, who asked not to be identified. "We are upset that people are blaming the
parents."
"We want the truth," said Lorena Aguilar. "Don't just say Hispanics are involved. Don't
just fault us."
Bernstein told police that as he stepped from his car at school Monday morning, two
Latino men punched him, splitting the skin above his eyebrow, held a sharp object to his
throat and left him unconscious in the car.
Bernstein told detectives that one of the men said, "We don't want you here, white
principal."
For the past year, a group of parents has been calling for Bernstein's removal because,
among other reasons, he doesn't speak Spanish. Tensions at the 750-student school rose
after passage of Proposition 227, requiring that most students be taught in English, not
Spanish, according to some teachers and parents.
As hostility between Bernstein and some parents grew, he called on Los Angeles Unified
School District administrators for help, Eli Brent, president of the principals union,
said Wednesday.
Instead, Bernstein "was told that he might be receiving a letter indicating dismissal or
demotion" on the grounds that the blame might lie with his administration, Brent said.
In January, Bernstein called the Anti-Defamation League, saying he faced growing anti
white sentiment at the school, according to Sue Stengel, Western states counsel for the
organization.
He wanted "advice regarding what was potentially a discriminatory situation he felt he
was experiencing," she said.
The league sent him complaint forms, but he has not returned them, Stengel said.
Bernstein, recuperating at home, declined to discuss his job status. He said he expected
to return to work in "a couple weeks."
Some of the parents at Wednesday's meeting, who included longtime critics of Bernstein,
challenged his account of the beating. They said it was strange that the first call he made
after the attack was to his office, not 911 for emergency or police help.
They also expressed doubts that a Latino would call him "white principal" and not gringo
or guero, more common Spanish slurs for whites.
Police said they are investigating the incident as Bernstein reported it.
The Anti-Defamation League joined school union leaders Wednesday in criticizing
comments made Tuesday by Los Angeles school board President Victoria Castro. After the
attack, she expressed sympathy for the parents who wanted to remove Bernstein.
"We can't understand how anyone within our school family can make statements that
gives validity to mob action," said Brent, head of Associated Administrators of Los
Angeles.
Day Higuchi, president of United Teachers-Los Angeles, said: "You have to look beyond
the simple question, does or doesn't the administrator speak the language of the parents?
There have been many great principals in East L.A. who didn't speak a lick of Spanish."
Castro said Wednesday that she opposes violence under any circumstances, but she
reiterated that it is reasonable for Latino parents to want a Latino principal.
She joined board member Julie Korenstein in asking the school board to approve a
$25,000 reward for information leading to the conviction of Bernstein's assailants.
County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky said he would ask the Board of Supervisors to
approve an additional $25,000. Both motions are expected to be voted on Tuesday. Times
staff writers Jeffrey Gettleman and Louis Sahagun and correspondent Diane Wedner
contributed to this story.
- Copyright 1999 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved