When Charlotte Lartey was 4 years old, she discovered her sister standing in a bathtub, screaming in pain after pouring bleach on her skin so that the other girls at school would stop calling her “ugly” and “evil.”
About eight years later, a boy who had already directed an ethnic slur toward Lartey’s brother, stabbed her in the chest with a needle and told her to die.
During the first week of her first year as a teacher at Jordan High School in Sandy, Utah, a student scratched the N-word into her classroom door. In her second year of teaching, she walked into her classroom one morning and found “LARTEY HAS EBOLA” written in large letters across all of the whiteboards.
As the only Black educator at Washougal High School, Lartey wants to make sure young people of color in Washougal don’t experience the same discrimination she endured as a youngster growing up in a predominantly white Utah community.
“It’s very clear that some of the things that happened to me are still happening to kids today,” Lartey said. “I’ve healed, and found inner peace about my experiences, but the world is the same.”