racism

On Barnard and Columbia's Support for Policing

[Content warning: racism, policing, violence around campus]

In the past few weeks, No Red Tape and Take Back the Night have watched the Columbia University administration remain silent while systems of policing continue to endanger Black and Brown community members. This includes the university administration’s silence regarding the New York District Attorney charging the children accused of killing Tess Majors as adults. 

While both of our groups remain committed to supporting survivors of violence regardless of the path they choose for justice after assaults, including survivors who choose to report to law enforcement, we actively oppose the carceral system in our broader work to eradicate gender-based violence. 

The carceral system was designed to maintain white supremacy, not provide “justice” or deter violence. Destroying the lives of young Black members of our community will not bring Tess back. There are systems of accountability such as restorative justice that could give those who harmed Tess the opportunity to take responsibility for their actions without subjecting them to violence, and give closure to those affected by Tess’s death. 

Using eminent domain, the university has spent years stealing the land that many Harlem residents called home, which displaced families and significantly increased local housing costs. As campus anti-sexual violence activists, we have also seen the university treat Black and Brown student survivors as disposable, from racially profiling them as inherently mentally unstable to calling Public Safety on survivors despite the danger policing poses to students’ lives to discouraging Black survivors from reporting assaults out of “racial solidarity.”

The university’s abhorrent treatment of Black and Brown people in our community and gentrification of the neighborhood cannot be divorced from Tess’s death and the police violence enacted upon the children accused of harming Tess. Furthering economic inequality only increases the likelihood of situations arising like that which occurred in December.

As students who have benefited from Columbia’s racist theft of land and had our tuition dollars used to fund policing on campus, we feel we have an obligation to speak out against Columbia’s endorsement of inequality, discrimination, and violence. It is only through ending violence that we will ever truly get justice for Tess, and incarceration and increasing policing will only continue cycles of violence in our community. 

In the words of Angela Davis, “The prison … functions ideologically as an abstract site into which undesirables are deposited, relieving us of the responsibility of thinking about the real issues afflicting those communities from which prisoners are drawn in such disproportionate numbers.” We refuse to let the university feel relieved of that responsibility.

On the Columbia Wrestling Team

This week, the Columbia community came together as students dealt with the results of the Presidential Election. We created safe spaces, organized rallies, and brought down the walls that normally divide students . We seemed to be taking the advice of Secretary Hillary Clinton and President Barack Obama when, rather than give into the hate and gloom spurned by this election, we comforted each other and looked to the future.

Bwog’s recent uncovering of GroupMe messages sent by the Columbia Men’s Wrestling team provides a glaring depiction of the reality of hate and ignorance on this campus—a reality that is hard to accept for many of us. The messages, from 2014 and 2015, were examples of the hate that women, people of color, the LGBTQ+ community, and many other marginalized people face daily.

Equally as disturbing is the mockery of sexual assault that the wrestlers make in the messages. Columbia University is tied for the second-most open Title IX investigations with the Office of Civil Rights in the country and is the first school many think of when they hear thinking about sexual assault on college campuses; sexual assault is not a joke and should never be dismissed as one.

No Red Tape condemns the actions and behaviors of the Columbia Men’s Wrestling team and believes they should be held accountable for their words. We hope we, as a campus community, can use this incident to strengthen our commitment to prevention education and having discussions about inclusivity. Our nationwide discourse about justice and liberation begins with the rhetoric of those closest to us, and it is on all of us to hold each other accountable for bigotry.

We are in solidarity with everyone who has been affected by these messages. In light of the events that have unfolded this week, Columbia Psychological Services is holding extended walk-in hours. For more information, you can contact them at 212-854-2878.