Members of a nearly 100-year-old group of Black fraternities and sororities are speaking out against Florida’s “harmful and discriminatory policies,” including the approval of the controversial new African American history standards.

Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity announced last week that it won’t hold its 99th General Convention in Orlando in 2025, calling Florida “hostile” to the Black community. The announcement came shortly after another historically Black fraternity, Kappa Alpha Psi, said in a news release that it was joining a “broad coalition of organizations in solidarity against insensitive, discriminatory, and racist policies being promoted in the State of Florida by Governor Ron DeSantis and his allies.”

“I don’t think that the the folks who are creating these policies really understand how the blowback from this will occur, in terms of the activism that will be generated from our college students to activism that will be generated from our alumni members. … This is in our DNA of fighting and winning and we will fight and win,” said Lawrence Ross, Alpha Phi Alpha member and author.

What is the Divine Nine?

The “Divine Nine” is a nickname for the National Pan-Hellenic Council coined by Ross in his book “The Divine Nine: The History of African American Fraternities and Sororities.”

The council was founded at Howard University, a historically Black university in Washington, D.C., in 1930 by Kappa Alpha Psi, Alpha Kappa Alpha, Omega Psi Phi, Delta Sigma Theta and Zeta Phi Beta. It expanded to include Alpha Phi Alpha and Phi Beta Sigma in 1931, Sigma Gamma Rho in 1937 and Iota Phi Theta in 1997.

Ross said the nine fraternities and sororities were created because of “a need for mutual support” as more Black students began attending colleges and universities at the turn of the century. He said there are now more than 750 chapters of these organizations worldwide.

What is an HBCU?Everything you need to know about historically Black colleges or universities

Not all members are Black − Willis Lonzer, general president of Alpha Phi Alpha, noted the fraternity has been interracial since 1945 − but the needs that sparked the creation of the Divine Nine organizations remain today, according to the NPHC. The council said its primary purpose continues to be community awareness and “educational, economic, and cultural service activities.”

Ross said what sets these sororities and fraternities apart from their predominantly white counterparts is their lifelong commitment to community service and social activism. He said college chapters and alumni groups work together, often with other organizations like the NAACP and National Urban League, on a variety of initiatives to support the African American community.