News
Garber Announces Advisory Committee for Harvard Law School Dean Search
News
First Harvard Prize Book in Kosovo Established by Harvard Alumni
News
Ryan Murdock ’25 Remembered as Dedicated Advocate and Caring Friend
News
Harvard Faculty Appeal Temporary Suspensions From Widener Library
News
Man Who Managed Clients for High-End Cambridge Brothel Network Pleads Guilty
Is the KKK rising to prominence once again on Manhattan’s Upper West
Side? As strange as this sounds, the rhetoric surrounding a disturbing
but overblown racially-charged vandalism incident at Columbia might
lead one to think so.
It is important to reflect on this misdeed, not because it
exposes a “pattern of ignorance” or “atmosphere of racial tension” as
many at Columbia are quick to allege, but because it demonstrates a
broad and dangerous pattern of students at diverse liberal universities
resorting to histrionics in the face of small, isolated occurrences.
The incident in question involved two very drunk young
college males who seemingly decided to play a prank on one of their
girlfriends by adorning her suite with swastikas and ludicrously
incoherent statements such as “I love Adolf because he is king.”
Realizing their tasteless mistake, they attempted to paint over the
graffiti the next morning, only to be caught by police before they
could complete their cleanup.
The two face not only up to four years in prison for a felony
charge of criminal mischief as a hate crime, but they have provoked an
outcry against a campus environment allegedly fraught with racism.
University President Lee Bollinger went as far as to say that
“the entire Columbia community is injured when any of its members are
made, unjustly to feel vulnerable.” One student even told the Columbia
Spectator that the whole thing made her afraid to go to class. Yet, the
contention that anyone was made to feel vulnerable when the
perpetrators were so scared by what they had done that they immediately
tried to cover it up is ridiculous.
In fact perhaps the only students made to feel truly
vulnerable were those who did not immediately decry the vandalism
incident. One of the victims of the “hate crime,” Cassie Herr, a
roommate of the girlfriend in question, comfortably played the race
card at a rally deriding the events. “I don’t see enough white faces,”
she said. “We are the majority and…it is our job to make sure that
everyone…feels supported here.” Apparently this is a new take on the
white man’s burden.
Herr’s roommate, Daphne Rubin-Vega, offered incoherent musings
about broad-based intolerance. “I also don’t want people to think that
[the vandalism] is what racism is,” she said. “Racism is much more
subtle.”
Perhaps the comments of Herr and Rubin-Vega can be excused,
however, as they did have to endure some rather disturbing images on
their walls. What should not stand is the shameless exploitation of the
vandalism by those with other agendas.
Student Tasha Amezcua alleged shortly after the incident that
“this university has a racist history and we need that to be gone.” She
added: “We have issues with the Columbia curriculum and our core
classes in terms of them just being about dead white men; that’s not
what the world is any more, that’s not what New York is…it’s very
alienating in the classroom.”
Aside from their factual inaccuracy—Columbia requires a
minimum of two non-Western culture courses, four terms of foreign
language, and includes female and minority authors in its required
Western Civilization classes—her statements foolishly give weight and
power to dolts who still engage in prejudiced behavior.
Unfortunately, Harvard is not immune from this sort of
misplaced outrage. Last semester, some belligerent drunk, white trash,
townie hooligans’ minor altercation with a gay student led to
campus-wide condemnation of anti-gay violence. More than 1,200 pink
bandanas were distributed to show solidarity with the victim, and
students even marched to “take back” the site where the incident took
place.
The orgy of empathy even spurred Assistant Dean of the College
Paul J. McLoughlin II to suggest that “there’s still a lot of work to
be done” with regard to campus tolerance. Yet no one offered any real
ideas on how to stop drive-by homophobia on the streets of Cambridge,
which most likely occurred because the University has little power in
this area to begin with.
In fact, the incident was so unrelated to homophobia on
campus, that it makes one question whether some students saw it more as
means toward publicity.
Hate crimes are terrible acts of ignorance that hurt the
entire communities of the victims involved. But if this label is too
quickly attached or used toward other ends, it is stripped of all
meaning and all moral authority on the subject is lost.
Often it is more effective to turn one’s back to the few
remaining pockets of intolerance and let them whither away. Recently a
Muslim student was chided as a “filthy Jew-hater” by a woman near
Lamont Library. Rather than exacerbating the incident, she simply
called the police and acknowledged that the isolated event did not
reflect the norm at Harvard. Whoever uttered those hateful words did
not face harsh rebuke by the student body, but just deafening silence
that marginalized her more than any rally ever could.
If only the students at Columbia had realized that the vast
majority are so opposed to racism that it is easy to calmly snuff out
the few places where it remains. Instead, they chose to risk rekindling
the flame with their unnecessary fury.
John W. Hastrup ’06 is a government concentrator in Dunster House. His column appears on alternate Tuesdays.
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.