The Guardian (USA)

Harvard students sue, claiming school ignored professor’s sexual harassment

- Maya Yang and agency

Three graduate students at Harvard University have filed a lawsuit accusing the Ivy League school of ignoring for years the sexual harassment of students by a professor who they said threatened their academic careers if they reported him.

The students filed the lawsuit in federal court in Boston days after Harvard placed John Comaroff, an anthropolo­gy professor and expert on South Africa, on administra­tive leave following a university investigat­ion into his conduct.

Margaret Czerwiensk­i, Lilia Kilburn and Amulya Mandava alleged that Comaroff for years “kissed and groped students without their consent, made unwelcome sexual advances, and threatened to sabotage students’ careers if they complained”.

They said they were among the students who reported Comaroff to Harvard officials. Yet despite those warnings, Harvard watched as he retaliated by ensuring the students would have “trouble getting jobs”, the lawsuit said.

In an investigat­ion launched by the school, Harvard obtained Kilburn’s private therapy records without her permission and revealed them to Comaroff, the suit alleges. The investigat­ion was “neither ‘prompt’ nor ‘equitable’; nor was it designed to ‘stop discrimina­tion, remedy any harm,’ or ‘prevent its recurrence,’ as Harvard’s written policies promise”, the suit said.

Comaroff, who joined Harvard in 2012, was not named as a defendant. His lawyers – Norman Zalkind, Janet Halley, and Ruth O’Meara-Costello – in a joint statement said he “categorica­lly denies ever harassing or retaliatin­g against any student”.

Harvard had no comment. In January, it placed Comaroff on leave for the spring semester and barred him from teaching required courses after finding he engaged in verbal conduct that violated its sexual harassment and profession­al conduct policies.

Those sanctions have divided the Harvard community, where nearly 40 faculty members signed an open letter questionin­g the investigat­ion and calling him an “excellent colleague”. Almost 80 faculty members signed a counter letter, that said they were “dismayed that these faculty members would openly align themselves against students who have lodged complaints about a tenured professor”.

In Tuesday’s lawsuit, the women said Harvard’s inaction allowed Comaroff to repeatedly and forcibly kiss Kilburn, grope her in public and even graphicall­y described ways she would be supposedly raped or killed in South Africa for being in a same-sex relationsh­ip.

When Kilburn attempted to avoid Comaroff, he prohibited her from working with her other adviser, the lawsuit said.

During a dinner in 2017 with faculty and graduate students, Comaroff compared himself to Harvey Weinstein, according to the lawsuit. He said: “They’re coming for me next!”

The suit said his wife, Harvard professor Jean Comaroff, who was also in attendance, criticized women who confronted or reported sexual violence and asked: “Whatever happened to rolling with the punches?”

All three said their academic trajectori­es and career prospects had been “profoundly altered” and that Harvard violated Title IX of the Educationa­l Amendments of 1972, which protects students from discrimina­tion based on sex, and various Massachuse­tts laws.

In addition to the allegation­s from the plaintiffs, a Harvard committee tasked with examining the “climate” within the school’s anthropolo­gy department concluded that the department is “plagued by a ‘longstandi­ng pattern of sexism, misogyny and sexual and gender-based misconduct’ that ‘has gone largely unchecked by a predominan­tly white, male faculty’”.

The committee went on to conclude that Harvard “has condoned a ‘culture in which the abuse of power is normalized and accommodat­ed’”.

According to the lawsuit, Comaroff had harassed students for years prior to joining Harvard. When he taught at the University of Chicago, he was surrounded by “pervasive allegation­s of sexual misconduct”.

Reuters contribute­d to this report Informatio­n and support for anyone affected by rape or sexual abuse issues is available from the following organisati­ons. In the US, Rainn offers support on 800-656-4673. In the UK, Rape Crisis offers support on 0808 802 9999. In Australia, support is available at 1800Respec­t (1800 737 732). Other internatio­nal helplines can be found at ibiblio.org /rcip/internl.html

 ?? Photograph: Charles Krupa/AP ?? Sanctions against anthropolo­gy Professor John Comaroff have divided the Harvard community.
Photograph: Charles Krupa/AP Sanctions against anthropolo­gy Professor John Comaroff have divided the Harvard community.
 ?? Harvard graduate students Amulya Mandava, Lilia Kilburn and Margaret Czerwiensk­i. Photograph: Lena Warnke Photograph­y/Reuters ??
Harvard graduate students Amulya Mandava, Lilia Kilburn and Margaret Czerwiensk­i. Photograph: Lena Warnke Photograph­y/Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States