The Tufts Daily - Wednesday, September 22, 2021

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THE

VOLUME LXXXI, ISSUE 7

INDEPENDENT

STUDENT

N E W S PA P E R

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TUFTS

UNIVERSITY

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T HE T UFTS DAILY

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

tuftsdaily.com

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Tufts supports Afghan student community amid ongoing crisis by Anton Shenk News Editor

As Tufts community members impacted by the United States’ withdrawal from Afghanistan grapple with the ongoing crisis, community members have worked tirelessly to support students and address the lack of on-campus engagement around the issue. Andrew Shiotani, director of Tufts International Center, has been one community member closely engaging with impacted students — supporting Afghan students through academic, financial and mental health challenges. The International Center has been particularly focused on assisting two new students from Afghanistan. Tufts support of community members impacted by the United States’ withdrawal from Afghanistan drew increased attention, including an email acknowledgement by University President Anthony Monaco, as the 20th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks neared. “While recent events in Afghanistan have undoubtedly caused us all to take pause and reflect, Tufts is committed to supporting our students and scholars from the region, and as part of the larger higher education community, working to ensure that scholars, especially women, receive a safe haven to continue their scholarly pursuits in the true spirit of academic freedom,”

EVAN SAYLES / THE TUFTS DAILY ARCHIVES

The Tufts International Center supports international students, scholars, employees and their dependents throughout their time at Tufts. Monaco wrote to the Tufts community. In addition to the array of administrative departments mobilizing to support students in the spirit of President Monaco’s message, Tufts students and organizations have also mobilized, according to Tufts’ South Asian Regional Committee (SARC).

“Many students and student groups have also either conducted their own fundraisers or committed time and effort to raising money for external fundraisers to help the Afghan people,” SARC shared in an email to the Daily. SARC is optimistic that community events focusing on the Afghanistan crisis will pro-

vide a chance for students to become more informed on the region. “Any lack of engagement or discourse on the crisis at Tufts could likely be attributed to a lack of awareness or understanding of the crisis, so we are hopeful that these planned events will help foster further discourse and broaden students’

understanding of the crisis,” SARC said. Perhaps contributing to the lack of knowledge about the crisis is Tufts’ limited student enrollment from the region. According to the Tufts University Fact Book, a compilation of characteristics of Tufts’ student

by Marianna Schantz

also hosted at Beijing Normal University and which started in the summer of 2020 to accommodate Chinese international students during COVID-19, is continuing this fall. “Unfortunately, we are canceling our Tufts in Beijing program due to visa processing,” Ghosh said. “Students are preparing for spring programs, and we are hoping countries begin to reopen travel and the pandemic restrictions ease when appropriate.” According to Melanie Armstrong, assistant director of Tufts Global Education, the university decided to defer a few programs that would normally operate in the fall to the spring due to country-specific travel conditions and local conditions. These programs include Tufts in Chile, Tufts in Ghana and Tufts in Japan.

see AFGHANISTAN, page 3

Study abroad programs resume with COVID-19 restrictions News Editor

COURTESY SUSAN WANG

A London street is pictured, taken by alumna Susan Wang during her time in England, where she got stuck when the COVID-19 pandemic struck during her semester abroad.

As students who plan on studying abroad in the fall semester are gearing up for their trips, many programs are proceeding as planned, despite the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Mala Ghosh, associate dean and senior director of Tufts Global Education, said that it is exciting to watch students return to study abroad programs. “Students have been arriving at our Tufts Programs Abroad centers in Paris, Madrid, London, and Tübingen as well as beginning other study abroad programs with various partners across Europe,” Ghosh wrote in an email to the Daily. The university is also operating Tufts in Oxford, which is set to begin next month. Tufts in Beijing will not be continuing this semester. Tufts@BNU, however, which is

ARTS / page 5

OPINION / page 8

SPORTS / back

Emmy roasts Emmys

Arming survey detracts from conversations about radical changes in policing

Cross country sprints past competition at Bates

see STUDY ABROAD, page 3 NEWS

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