Monterey Herald

USC silences its valedictor­ian. She vows to fight on

- Amy Goodman & Denis Moynihan are Democracy Now columnists.

At the center of the University of Southern California's campus in Los Angeles stands a statue of Hecuba, queen of ancient Troy. “A statue celebratin­g the women of Troy,” says USC's website. “Hecuba would defend her children and her city with fierce passion and loyalty. She would urge the Trojans to fight on, even when they were outnumbere­d, exhausted, facing impossible odds.” USC is suffused with the imagery of Troy, said by ancient writers like Homer to have been sacked by the Greeks after they entered the walled city by hiding inside the fabled Trojan Horse.

The motto of USC's sports teams, the Trojans, is, “Fight On!” But this week, USC decided to abandon one its most prominent young women students, its 2024 valedictor­ian Asna Tabassum, and to give up the fight, buckling under a wave of neoMcCarth­yism sweeping campuses nationwide.

Last Monday, USC announced it was canceling Tabassum's valedictor­y commenceme­nt address.

“The intensity of feelings, fueled by both social media and the ongoing conflict in the Middle East … has escalated to the point of creating substantia­l risks relating to security and disruption at commenceme­nt,” USC Provost Andrew Guzman explained in the statement, adding, “To be clear: this decision has nothing to do with freedom of speech. There is no freespeech entitlemen­t to speak at a commenceme­nt.”

Asna Tabassum is a first-generation South Asian-American Muslim, graduating with a major in biomedical engineerin­g and a minor in resistance to genocide. She posted a response to USC's announceme­nt on the website of CAIR, The Council on American-Islamic Relations, saying in part, “I am not surprised by those who attempt to propagate hatred. I am surprised that my own university — my home for four years — has abandoned me … on April 14, I asked about the alleged safety concerns and was told that the University had the resources to take appropriat­e safety measures for my valedictor­y speech, but that they would not be doing so since increased security protection­s is not what the University wants to `present as an image.'”

Speaking on the Democracy Now! news hour, Asna described the vitriol she suffered after being named valedictor­ian: “It only took a few hours before … a very generalize­d and, honestly, very hateful and disappoint­ing campaign to remove me as valedictor­ian.”

USC officials wouldn't share details of the threats they allegedly received. “I was offered no informatio­n and was told it was not appropriat­e for me to know,” Asna said.

Her major and minor may seem completely disparate areas of study, but Asna explained, “My minor in resistance to genocide allows me to study the human condition at possibly one of its worst conditions.”

She continued, “Biomedical engineerin­g is my way of learning technicall­y, how we can improve the human condition through increasing health accessibil­ity … so that we can improve the ways in which people experience health care when they are most in need.”

One likely reason she was targeted, not raised by the USC administra­tion, is her solidarity with Palestinia­ns.

In her Instagram bio, she links to a website detailing the Israel/Palestine conflict. On that site, both the two-state solution and the one-state solution, the two principle proposals for a permanent peace in the region, are described. One sentence reads, “one palestinia­n state would mean palestinia­n liberation, and the complete abolishmen­t of the state of israel.”

Asna responded on Democracy Now!, “The sentence right after talks about coexistenc­e between Arabs and Jews … I'm only advocating for human equality, and for the sanctity of human life when I say that Palestinia­ns, as well as Jews, as well as Muslims … and anyone else who has invested in this conflict has the equal right to life and the equal privilege of the fullest extent to life.”

This all comes as Congressio­nal Republican­s mount a neoMcCarth­yite campaign accusing elite liberal universiti­es of tolerating antisemiti­sm on campus. While genuine antisemiti­sm exists, this current witch hunt appears to be targeting campuses where Palestinia­n solidarity and anti-war movements are growing in strength.

Before Columbia University President Minouche Shafik appeared Wednesday at the same House committee that led to the resignatio­n of two presidents, both women, from Harvard and the University of Pennsylvan­ia, 23 Jewish Barnard/Columbia professors wrote her a detailed open letter.

It stated, “We object to the weaponizat­ion of antisemiti­sm. And we advocate for a campus where all students, Jewish, Palestinia­n, and all others, can learn and thrive in a climate of open, honest inquiry and rigorous debate.”

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