Students at the Sundial

Students at the Sundial

UPDATE: Protest ended promptly at 9 pm, when attendees were invited to a following Black Student Union (BSO) meeting. There was also a small prayer circle on the sundial with Muslim, Hindu, and Christian prayers.

Students started gathering at the Sundial this evening at 7 pm to participate in  #STUDENTBLACKOUT, a protest in response to recent racially-motivated episodes at the University of Missouri and Yale. The event is meant to be an opportunity for students of color to “heal, express ourselves, support each other, and most importantly celebrate the courage and resolve of our brothers, sisters, and siblings around the world.”

After an introduction focused on segregated education, black students were invited to come up and share their own experiences with racism. Here are a few of them:

  • “I lived in the top floor of John Jay, called the Attic. There were a lot of people of color there. Someone put up a sign called “‘Home of the Monkeys.'”
  • “I am a black engineer and have never had a math or science teacher who looks like me. I walked into lecture of 300 students and only about 10 of them looked like me.”
  • “My mom went to Barnard 28 years ago. Her experience is eerily similar to mine. She did not interact with white students because they did not want to interact with her. She could not separate the fact that she was on full scholarship and from low income neighborhood with her identity.”
  • “In 2009 a professor came to her office to find a noose hung on the door. It was a news story across New York. Columbia swept it under the rug. When I got here I didn’t know about it.”

Other stories touched on casual racism and financial inequality; many speakers expressed concerns about the future.

All the while, student leaders declared, “All the people who hear us and are walking by are part of the problem. If you’re not saying the chants you’re not involved. Everyone has to contribute as much as possible. People are being oppressed. But the victims feel it the worst of all.”

They also noted the increase in participants in this protest, compared to similar ones last year. One person suggested, “”I think there are more people here than last year because it is easier for you to stand with a black college than for a black man who was selling loosies [cigs] at the subway,” referring to the case of Eric Garner.

There is NYPD presence in the form of a van between 115th and 116th St. on Broadway, as well as a car on 114th and Amsterdam (although it is facing away from Columbia). Helicopters are occasionally visible, but they might be unrelated.

We will update this post with any further developments.