Homecoming is big for an HBCU. Postponing Morgan State’s was a huge deal.

Malika Moore’s bags for Baltimore were nearly packed. She had secured a plane ticket from Cincinnati, made a hotel reservation and had a hair appointment just before her afternoon flight. She was ready for homecoming at Morgan State University.

Then she learned of the incident on campus Tuesday, when five people — four of them students — were injured in a shooting, causing her to “lose my breath for a minute,” she said. Almost instantly she realized that the weekend she had anticipated for the last year was in flux.

So, when it was announced Wednesday that homecoming at the historically Black college would not go on — an unprecedented occurrence — Moore said she “sort of lost my breath again, but in a different way.”

“Homecoming is a special thing,” the 1981 graduate said. “I have missed maybe five homecomings since I finished at Morgan. That tells you everything.”

In making the announcement, Morgan State president David Wilson said  that “regrettably for the very first time in Morgan’s history, all activities planned around homecoming will be either cancelled or postponed until the perpetrator(s) of this atrocity have been found and brought to justice.”

Those activities included an array of parties, the annual pep rally and parade that passes through the local community, MSU’s 39th annual gala and, of course, the football game.

Moore learned of the cancellation from a friend she was planning to meet in Baltimore. “It’s a tradition: My friends who were in school with me — my closest friends — would meet there and have the most beautiful time enjoying all the activities, reminiscing about things that happened when we were students and seeing old classmates,” she said. “It’s a beautiful time that is on the calendar just about every year. So, to miss it — to have it canceled — is sad.”

For alumni and students of HBCUs, homecoming is far more than just about the game. It is a “rite of passage that, to me, confirms the impact of your college experience,” said Mike Smith, a 1999 graduate of Tennessee State University in Nashville. “I met my wife at homecoming. I feel alive when I go back, seeing old friends and sharing about each other’s lives. I didn’t even go to Morgan State, but to hear about an HBCU having to cancel a homecoming makes me feel some kind of way. It’s very unfortunate.”

While there is disappointment about the homecoming postponement, Moore said she was not mad about it, but sad.  “We should not have to go through this. Those students should not have to go through this. There should not be people coming on our campus or any campus creating this kind of situation where students are shot.”

Alexis Wray, a North Carolina A&T graduate, who writes extensively about the HBCU experience forReckon, an online news organization, said the impact of homecoming is immeasurable. But the Morgan State case is the result of an extenuating circumstance.