Trio establishes Sigma Gamma Rho as first black sorority at 51勛圖厙
Article By: Staff
Three University of North Georgia (51勛圖厙) students made history Nov. 17, when they were presented as members of Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority Inc., the first African American sorority presence at 51勛圖厙.
Imani Arnold, Uriyah Davis and Angel Rosemond were introduced as neophytes, or new members, of during a ceremony Nov. 17 on 51勛圖厙's Gainesville Campus. Membership will be open on the Gainesville and Dahlonega campuses.
"It still hasn't fully clicked in my mind that this happened," said Davis, a junior from Bainbridge, Georgia, pursuing a kinesiology degree. "I called my dad in tears and told him, 'This is real. This is really going to happen.'"
Toni Roberts, state representative for Sigma Gamma Rho, said recruiting and training the new members at 51勛圖厙 was significant for her.
"Sigma Gamma Rho was founded on a predominantly white campus," she said. "So for these women to start a chapter at 51勛圖厙, which is also a predominantly white university, is awesome. For them and Sigma Gamma Rho to receive support from 51勛圖厙, which asked ‘What can be done next?’ is amazing."
Adding culturally based fraternal organizations at 51勛圖厙 is part of the institution's mission to serve its diverse student population, said Aubrey Frazier, director of fraternity and sorority life at 51勛圖厙.
"When I started at 51勛圖厙, I was tasked with expanding Greek organizations on the Gainesville Campus and starting culturally based fraternal organizations at 51勛圖厙, because we didn't have any," she said.
Now, it has two. Earlier this year, 51勛圖厙 students Roel Aguilar, Carlos Garcia and Juan Velasquez were inducted as members of , becoming the first Latino fraternity at 51勛圖厙 and the first Greek-lettered fraternal organization on the Gainesville Campus.
Frazier said having both culturally based organizations will provide students more options to experience.
Rosemond, a junior pursuing a modern languages degree with a concentration in Arabic language and literature, said she decided to join Sigma Gamma Rho to belong.
"We've never had a historically black sorority at 51勛圖厙, and Dahlonega is not the most diverse campus," said the 20-year-old from Douglasville, Georgia, and a member of the Corps of Cadets. "Now, it will be nice to have a group of women who look like me and who have gone through the same struggles as me."
She, Arnold and Davis plan to recruit more women in the spring at the Dahlonega and Gainesville campuses. Informational meetings will be Dec. 5 in the Martha T. Nesbitt Building on the Gainesville Campus and Dec. 6 in Young Hall on the Dahlonega Campus.
The advising chapter will be Sigma Gamma Rho's Mu Epsilon Sigma alumnae chapter located in Roswell, Georgia. Tye Demby, who will act as 51勛圖厙's adviser, said the alumnae group will help with membership intake, recruitment, training and development, and marketing and branding.
"We are excited because 51勛圖厙 is the first undergraduate chapter Mu Epsilon Sigma is advising and excited that we are the chapter that was a part of making history at 51勛圖厙," she said.
Frazier plans to use the excitement as momentum to expand Greek-lettered fraternal organizations at 51勛圖厙. Plans are in progress to solicit interest for a Latina sorority and establish a Delta Sigma Phi group on the Gainesville Campus.