Life has changed for most everyone amid the novel coronavirus pandemic, but students have faced unique and sudden shifts. For high schoolers who are graduating into a world that is in some ways both new and transitional, the experience can feel especially fraught and anxiety-inducing. Still, though, for students who are able to participate in a traditional, in-person graduation ceremony and receive a diploma with their families and friends present, the experience can give a feeling of normality.
Unless, as Ever Martinez Lopez says he experienced, you are informed you are not receiving your diploma because you violated the dress code during the ceremony. Violate the dress code in what way? In this case, by wearing a Mexican flag draped over his graduation grown. In a now-viral video, filmed by Lopez’s cousin Adolfo Hurtado and posted to TikTok, the senior is seen walking across the stage at his North Carolina high school graduation ceremony on June 3 and receiving an empty diploma holder (which is what all students first receive on stage) while wearing the flag. But unlike other students, Lopez did not receive his actual diploma.
In speaking to ABC News, Lopez said Asheboro High School Principal Penny Crooks stopped him for a brief moment before he exited the stage carrying the diploma holder. According to Lopez, Crooks told him he couldn't wear the flag. The result? When Lopez went to get his diploma after the ceremony (again, a norm for graduations), he was told he wasn’t getting the diploma because he violated the dress code.
You can see that first video here on Twitter, as well.
As seen in a second video, also posted to TikTok by Hurtado, Crooks, along with four police officers, appears to escort the senior and his family out of the school after the ceremony has ended. “He and his parents can come back tomorrow, and we can talk about it,” Ms. Crooks is heard saying in the video, adding “Go on.”
The Asheboro City School district issued a statement on Friday, reading in part that while the schools “strong support” students’ “expression” of heritage in the “appropriate time and place,” a graduation dress code is given to students ahead of time, and “the wearing of a flag of any kind is a violation of the dress code.” The statement asserts that: “This incident is not about the Mexican flag.”
Margarita Lopez, Lopez’s mother, talked to The Washington Post about her son’s choice to wear the flag and what it meant to her to watch him graduate. "When I saw him walk with our country's flag on his shoulders, I felt immensely proud and thought, 'This boy was born here and he is not ashamed of his roots, of where his parents come from. He is proud of it,'" she told the outlet, adding that when she learned the school refused to give him the diploma certificate, she felt “rage and shame” at the same time.
Also speaking to the Post, Hurtado brought up the applause his cousin received during the graduation ceremony. “All his peers in the crowd were clapping and some teachers were clapping ... If wearing this flag was so disruptive, who did it cause a disruption to? Because no one in the crowd seemed to care,” he told the outlet.
In speaking to ABC News, Lopez made it clear his intention wasn’t to cause a disruption but to honor his family. He told the outlet that his parents and “whole family” are from Mexico, adding, “I did it for them because they had a rough childhood, they didn't get the scholarship that I got, or they didn't get to go to school like I did.” As reported by The New York Times, Lopez would have been the first member of his immediate family to graduate from a U.S. high school.
The school district told ABC News that as of Sunday, Lopez’s diploma is available for pickup, and has been since Friday. What does the family want at this point? As Lopez’s mother told the Times, she and her son want an apology. “To me, this was an act of racism,” she told the outlet. “Not just to my son but to the entire Hispanic community.”
On Monday, June 7 the family actually held a press conference, which you can check out via a live stream courtesy of ABC News.
Lopez has garnered an enormous amount of support on Twitter, including by at least one name progressives will likely recognize.
You can watch brief interview clips with Lopez below.
YouTube Video
Update: Lopez received his diploma on Monday, as reported by local outlet WRAL.
Unless, as Ever Martinez Lopez says he experienced, you are informed you are not receiving your diploma because you violated the dress code during the ceremony. Violate the dress code in what way? In this case, by wearing a Mexican flag draped over his graduation grown. In a now-viral video, filmed by Lopez’s cousin Adolfo Hurtado and posted to TikTok, the senior is seen walking across the stage at his North Carolina high school graduation ceremony on June 3 and receiving an empty diploma holder (which is what all students first receive on stage) while wearing the flag. But unlike other students, Lopez did not receive his actual diploma.
In speaking to ABC News, Lopez said Asheboro High School Principal Penny Crooks stopped him for a brief moment before he exited the stage carrying the diploma holder. According to Lopez, Crooks told him he couldn't wear the flag. The result? When Lopez went to get his diploma after the ceremony (again, a norm for graduations), he was told he wasn’t getting the diploma because he violated the dress code.
You can see that first video here on Twitter, as well.
North Carolina student Evan Lopez was denied his diploma for wearing a Mexican flag at graduation. Lopez wore the flag in tribute to his immigrant family, but Asheboro school officials maintain that it was a distraction and violated the ceremony’s dress code pic.twitter.com/8ATxG0nK3C
— NowThis (@nowthisnews) June 7, 2021
As seen in a second video, also posted to TikTok by Hurtado, Crooks, along with four police officers, appears to escort the senior and his family out of the school after the ceremony has ended. “He and his parents can come back tomorrow, and we can talk about it,” Ms. Crooks is heard saying in the video, adding “Go on.”
The Asheboro City School district issued a statement on Friday, reading in part that while the schools “strong support” students’ “expression” of heritage in the “appropriate time and place,” a graduation dress code is given to students ahead of time, and “the wearing of a flag of any kind is a violation of the dress code.” The statement asserts that: “This incident is not about the Mexican flag.”
Margarita Lopez, Lopez’s mother, talked to The Washington Post about her son’s choice to wear the flag and what it meant to her to watch him graduate. "When I saw him walk with our country's flag on his shoulders, I felt immensely proud and thought, 'This boy was born here and he is not ashamed of his roots, of where his parents come from. He is proud of it,'" she told the outlet, adding that when she learned the school refused to give him the diploma certificate, she felt “rage and shame” at the same time.
Also speaking to the Post, Hurtado brought up the applause his cousin received during the graduation ceremony. “All his peers in the crowd were clapping and some teachers were clapping ... If wearing this flag was so disruptive, who did it cause a disruption to? Because no one in the crowd seemed to care,” he told the outlet.
In speaking to ABC News, Lopez made it clear his intention wasn’t to cause a disruption but to honor his family. He told the outlet that his parents and “whole family” are from Mexico, adding, “I did it for them because they had a rough childhood, they didn't get the scholarship that I got, or they didn't get to go to school like I did.” As reported by The New York Times, Lopez would have been the first member of his immediate family to graduate from a U.S. high school.
The school district told ABC News that as of Sunday, Lopez’s diploma is available for pickup, and has been since Friday. What does the family want at this point? As Lopez’s mother told the Times, she and her son want an apology. “To me, this was an act of racism,” she told the outlet. “Not just to my son but to the entire Hispanic community.”
On Monday, June 7 the family actually held a press conference, which you can check out via a live stream courtesy of ABC News.
"What happened on Thursday isn't just about our son, it about our entire Latino community." Parents of student denied diploma after wearing a Mexican flag over his graduation gown call for an explanation, and for their son to receive his diploma. https://t.co/orfrZWydU0 pic.twitter.com/FBC20n1sQp
— ABC News Politics (@ABCPolitics) June 7, 2021
Lopez has garnered an enormous amount of support on Twitter, including by at least one name progressives will likely recognize.
Ever Lopez was denied his diploma after crossing the stage with a Mexican flag over his shoulders. His family was escorted out by police. This is a bad overreaction to a display of pride. He earned his diploma. https://t.co/di7EHdb4Hk
— Julián Castro (@JulianCastro) June 5, 2021
We're with you Ever Lopez. We're marching forward in the Tar Heel state. Not one step back!https://t.co/H9YstVIS4n
— Nathan Dollar (@NathanT_Dollar) June 5, 2021
Cars are honking and waving the Mexican flag next to a protest for Ever Lopez, who was denied his diploma for wearing a Mexican flag to graduation and supposedly breaking the dress code. This time, supporters from advocacy group @SiembraNC have come in from all over NC. pic.twitter.com/RBXKGHBAqa
— Michelle Shen (@michelle_shen10) June 5, 2021
You can watch brief interview clips with Lopez below.
YouTube Video
Update: Lopez received his diploma on Monday, as reported by local outlet WRAL.