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June 17, 2020 VOLUME XL, ISSUE 11 Online-Only Edition
Fordham Students Protest in the Name of Black Lives Matter By MIA AGOSTINELLI, SAMANTHA MATTHEWS and NICOLE PERKINS Contributing Writer and Features Editors
ESMÉ BLEECKER-ADAMS/THE OBSERVER
This mural in upper Manhattan is one of the many ways in which people have shown their support for the Black Live Matter movement. Fordham students across the country have gone to the streets to take part in protests demanding justice for George Floyd.
Students Push Back Against Administration’s Thoughts and Prayers By SAMANTHA MATTHEWS and NICOLE PERKINS Features Editors
On May 29, a petition was started asking Fordham to release a statement on the recent incidents of police brutality. It had been four days since George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, was killed by a white police officer kneeling on his neck for more than eight minutes, despite it being an unapproved use of force by the Minneapolis Police Department (MPD). This was just the latest in a series of killings of unarmed Black citizens, including Breonna Taylor, Tony McDade, Ahmaud Arbery and — on New York’s own Staten Island — Eric Garner. Protests had erupted across the country. What started one night in Minneapolis spread across the United States. The petition garnered thousands of responses — as of June 3, it has been signed over 2,000 times — and a statement was released by the university in a community-wide email on May 30. Rev. Joseph M. McShane, S.J., university president, wrote, “we will pray for the repose of the souls of George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery. We will also pray for their families as they wrestle with the losses they have suffered in and through the deaths of those whom they loved so dearly ... But, let’s be honest. That is not enough. We must do more.” He continued, “we must recommit ourselves to the work of educating for justice and to doing all we can to figure out how our beloved nation ... has allowed itself to stray from the ideals (and the promises those ideals hold out to all) upon which it was founded.”
However, McShane did not include any substantial actions here that the university would be taking toward combating the racial inequality at the root of the issue. Many students took notice of this lack of call to action and began expressing their thoughts. Fordham Lincoln Center (FLC)’s Black Student Alliance (BSA) said that they are “deeply disappointed in both the delay in Father McShane addressing the Black lives matter movement and George Floyd’s death and the way it was addressed.” They asserted that McShane’s message showed no plan to make Fordham safer and more inclusive for Black students and no pledge to donate to Black causes. Fordham has long touted the idea of being “men and women for others.” In the past week, its students have created petitions, sold art to raise donations for places like Black Visions Collective and hit the streets to protest. They have engaged with their community and the world around them. The Fordham administration has not signaled the same. Daejah Woolery, Fordham College at Lincoln Center (FCLC) ’22, was one of the commenters on Fordham’s Instagram post showcasing the statement — and she wasn’t pleased. “My biggest issue was that this institution had only words. Words do not protect the lives of their Black students. When I heard that the University of Minnesota severed their connection to the MPD I had some hope that Fordham would do the same with the NYPD. But no,” she wrote in an Observer interview. see PUSHBACK page 5
June is a historic month — it was in 1969 at the Stonewall Inn that queer activists, with trans women of color leading the charge, took up and fought against an early morning police raid on the gay bar. They fought against a history of systemic police oppression and constant attacks on their civil liberties — not by remaining quiet, nor by standing on the sidelines, nor by demonstrating in a way that was “convenient” to others. George Floyd was unjustly murdered on May 25 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. His death served as one of the many catalysts to fight back against a history of systemic oppression against Black people that is as long as the existence of the United States itself. This June, Fordham University students have embraced the Jesuit philosophy see PROTESTING page 6
FLOW Shows Support for #BlackLivesMatter By KEVIN STOLL Staff Writer
In a year where human relations have already been put to the test by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, recent incidents of police brutality further prove how 2020 might go down as one of the worst years in the history of mankind. However, to say that there has been public resistance towards the perpetrators responsible for the murders of victims such as George Floyd and Breonna Taylor would be an understatement. People from all walks of life have managed to gather together to take a stand against racial inequality, even during a time of social distancing. Many of Fordham’s clubs have also chosen to take action and inform others as to how they can make a difference, and Fordham’s Filipinos of LC Offering Welcome (FLOW) serve as no exception. Despite being a Filipino cultural club, FLOW is more than
ZOOM
The FLOW E-Board is committed to addressing the racial injustices against Black people within their own community, as pictured in this Zoom call.
willing to send their message to more than one demographic, as the club’s Public Relations Officer Isabel de Leon, Fordham College at Lincoln Center (FCLC) ’22, firmly believes in confronting this issue from a collective standpoint. “One of the contributions we've been continually working on is finding different
ways to fundraise for bail funds and other similar causes,” de Leon said. “We've created (Instagram) story bingo boards to encourage our members and followers to donate, as well as doing live interviews with past and present e-board members to collect donations.” see FLOW page 15
ASILI Holds Town Hall on Racial Issues at Fordham By GILLIAN RUSSO Online Editor
On June 3, ASILI, the Black Student Alliance (BSA) at Fordham’s Rose Hill campus, hosted a town hall via Instagram Live. Over 100 viewers tuned into the more than two-hour discussion moderated by ASILI President Diontay Santiago, Gabelli School of Business at Rose Hill (GSBRH) ’21. ASILI E-Board members and guests took the floor one by one to answer viewers’ questions
regarding the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement. Members also voiced concerns with the university’s response as well as racial tensions they experienced on campus even before the protests began, strongly urging Fordham to implement institution-wide change. Here is what they want the Fordham community to know. On the Current BLM Movement and Protests
nationwide Black Lives Matter demonstrations, including protests and a large social media movement, calling for an end to police brutality following the recent deaths of multiple Black people at the hands of the police. While expressing their support for Black Lives Matter, students also expressed concerns that the movement is not sufficiently intersectional, and that some respondents focus on the wrong displays of destruction.
The event was held amid
see ASILI page 4
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CPS Services
Protest Safely Page 13
The Student Voice of Fordham Lincoln Center
Queer Liberation March Page 19