COLUMBIA, Mo. – Black students at the University of Missouri can now better cope with “microaggressions” from their white privileged classmates thanks to special segregated counseling sessions for “Healing from Racial Injustices.”

The weekly meetings “for students, staff and faculty of color” are focused on “racial identity” and delivering “skills for surviving and resisting hate,” including ways to “process race-related macro and microaggressions,” according to a flyer posted to Facebook that has since been removed.

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The University of Missouri website lists the Healing from Racial Injustices group among its “student-led support groups” in the MU Multicultural Center.

“Come and share your experiences and learn strategies to heal from racial discomfort,” the website reads. “The support group will provide a space for people of color to do the following: Process violence against people of color, validate and affirm one another, process race-related macro and microaggressions, and heal as a community.”

The special group meets every Friday between August 25 and December 15 at 2 p.m. in the Multicultural Center, with discussions led by doctoral students Oscar Rojas Perez and Yoanna McDowell, according to the flyer.

And while the group is described as “student led,” it receives support from the college’s Department of Black Studies, the College of Education, the Department of Psychological Sciences, the Division of Inclusion, Diversity, and Equity, and the Department of Educational, School, & Counseling Psychology.

College officials ignored Campus Reform’s request for more information about the segregated healing sessions.

“In the past, our discussions have focused on racial identity develop (sic), mindfulness, colorism, self-love, and experiences of holding two or three marginalized identities,” according to the Facebook post cited by the Daily Caller. “We also focus on skills for surviving and resisting hate through the use of emotional regulation, mindfulness, and distress tolerance. Please feel free to share this with anyone you think might be interested. Pizza will be provided so please RSVP before midnight on Thursdays at [email protected].”

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The Daily Caller notes that the special race sessions follow steep declines in enrollment in recent years following a rash of Black Lives Matter protests on campus in 2015.

According to the site:

The protests by the Concerned Student 1950 group centered largely on Jonathan Butler, the son of a millionaire railroad executive. Butler went on a hunger strike and convinced 32 black Mizzou football players to boycott all team activities.

There was a poop swastika.

There were false reports of people wearing Ku Klux Klan hoods.

The protests featured lots of camping out on an occupied campus quad, which served as a hub for fomenting unrest.

A now-fired professor, Melissa Click, threatened a student cameraman with mob violence when he tried to cover the ongoing protests.

The ordeal led to the resignation of MU President Timothy Wolfe, who protestors accused of not doing enough to heal racial problems on campus. Last year, applications to Mizzou were down 23 percent, which forced school officials to shutter several dorms as it grapples with a $32 million budget shortfall, The Daily Caller reports.