Student Advocates Defend Imprisoned Activist
March 7, 2019
BLOOMINGTON, Ill. Four 糖心动漫vlog students have traveled to Washington, D.C. to advocate on behalf of an imprisoned Saudi Arabian professor during (SAR)檚 third annual Student Advocacy Days, March 7-8.
Scholars at Risk is an international network of individuals from over 500 higher education institutions who are committed to protecting and offering sanctuary to threatened scholars and students. Students involved in SAR檚 Student Advocacy Seminars work to defend the rights of specific scholars by conducting legal research and advocating to foreign governments on the scholar檚 behalf.
SAR students and faculty advisors from across the U.S. and Canada participate in hands-on workshops on human rights practices, followed by a day of advocacy on Capitol Hill on behalf of wrongfully imprisoned scholars.
Hatoon al-Fassi, a history professor and prominent women's rights activist who was arrested by the Saudi Arabian government in 2018, is just one of these scholars. Student advocates Ann Crumbaugh 19, Drew Hiller 22, Kira Schoen 21 and Tatum Zsorey 21 hope that their efforts to investigate the details of al-Fassi檚 imprisonment and torture will place pressure on the Saudi Arabian government to release al-Fassi and women檚 rights activists like her.
淲ith cases such as Professor Hatoon al-Fassi檚, it is very difficult to imagine a happy ending, admitted Zsorey. 淲hile Saudi Arabia intentionally withholds information, it is difficult to establish the specifics of her arrest and the case in general. It is important for Professor Hatoon al-Fassi and all scholars like her that people continue to talk about and spread the word about her case. By reminding Saudi Arabia that the attention of the international community is on their human rights violations, we can hope that the professor檚 conditions will at least be bettered and that she may one day be released.
SAR students voices will be joined by those of prominent figures in government and social policy. Throughout the event, students will have the chance to engage with guest speakers, scholars, panelists, government officials, and a number of leaders from NGOs such as PEN America, the Defending Freedoms Project and the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy.
Students will also present their cases and discuss potential advocacy actions with
elected government officials.
淭his event is designed to provide students with skills they檒l need in their future
careers, said Clare Robinson, SAR檚 Advocacy Director. 淭hey practice public speaking,
develop leadership and cross-campus teamwork skills, and learn how to be an effective
advocate.
淎nd they make a difference while doing so.
Zsorey, an international studies major, has found that her work with Scholars at Risk and other advocacy groups has made a difference in her academics as well as her personal life.
淓ven though human rights violations don檛 affect our everyday lives, it still matters because the unchecked denial of one person檚 human rights anywhere around the world is a sign to violators that their actions are acceptable, Zsorey emphasized. 淭he advancement of human rights truly fails when we stop talking about such cases and completely ignore the abhorrent conditions that prisoners of conscience face throughout the world.
淲e hope that in talking with members of Congress and spreading information about human rights and its defenders around college campuses, we will keep the pursuit of Professor Hatoon al-Fassi檚 case alive.
By Rachel McCarthy 21