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Members of the Harvard Prison Divestment Campaign organized a rally Thursday afternoon calling on Harvard to divest from industries, companies, and funds they say are part of the prison-industrial complex.
The HPDC released a report in 2019 alleging that the University has at least $3 million in investments in prison-related companies. Harvard has previously stated that the University has no direct holdings in businesses that operate private prisons.
University spokesperson Jonathan Swain declined to comment on Thursday’s rally and HPDC’s demands.
HPDC provides a capacious definition of “prison-industrial complex,” including state and non-state entities, weapons manufacturers, bail bondsmen, analytics and surveillance technology manufacturers, police and guard unions, and pharmaceutical corporations.
Thursday’s protest was organized to mark the 50th anniversary of the Attica Prison Rebellion, in which prisoners at the maximum-security Attica Correctional Facility in New York seized control of the prison to demand improved living conditions, sparking the bloodiest prison confrontation in U.S. history.
Protest organizer Lydia S. Ghuman, a student at Harvard Law School, opened the rally by recounting the demands of the Attica prisoners. Those demands are similar to those of present-day incarcerated advocates for prisoners’ rights, Ghuman said.
“These demands still exist today and are arguably more dire,” she said.
During the rally, Divinity School student Azani A. Creeks read from a letter written by another Divinity School student to her mother, who is incarcerated. In the letter, the student tells her mother about Harvard’s investments.
“‘Now that I attend Harvard University my story is complicit with a system that would choose to dehumanize you,’” Creeks read from the letter. “I pray that Harvard University will, someday, see you as I see you. I pray that Harvard would own the harm they have caused you, and divest from companies that invest in your previous ‘enslavement.’”
Joseph M. “Joe” Pinto, a Divinity School alumnus and an early organizer with HPDC, said he attended the protest to remind Harvard that the group will continue to put pressure on the University this year, despite the Covid-19 pandemic preventing them from demonstrating on campus over the past year.
“Campus has reopened and we’re here,” he said. “We haven’t gone anywhere.”
Pinto also said that while Harvard may not directly invest in private prisons, the University bears responsibility for what HPDC claims are indirect investments in the prison industry.
“You actually can pull out your indirect funds,” Pinto said. “There are filters that can be applied pretty easily to investing that say, ‘we want our money here, but not there.’”
Ghuman said after the rally that she appreciated the increased recognition of the issues for which HPDC advocates, compared to when the campaign initially formed in 2018.
“When HPDC first started, we would have to fight for something as simple as to get the word ‘abolition’ even recognized,” Ghuman said. “Now, we already have a similar framework and starting ground with people.”
Ghuman said she was optimistic about the future of the divest movement.
“If we can make Harvard divest, a lot of other schools will divest,” Ghuman said. “It’s a slow and long battle, but it’s one we think we can win – it’ll just take time.”
—Staff writer Eric Yan can be reached at eric.yan@thecrimson.com.
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