A small group of students expressed frustration over campus tensions and the university’s corresponding response Wednesday evening by marching around the Lincoln Park campus and staging a sit-in in Arts & Letters Hall.
The event comes more than a week after conservative writer Milo Yiannopoulos’ chaotic appearance at DePaul, which led to protests and exposed issues many students say have gone unaddressed for too long.
The protesters, a diverse crowd of around 20 students, zig-zagged around campus several times before staging a silent sit-in in the Arts and Letters Hall at 5:50 p.m. It follows events earlier in the day, which saw an anti-hate speech banner drop just hours before in the same building, and it preceded a town hall meeting hosted by the Black Student Union later that evening.
Senior Felicia Darnell, one of the leaders of the protest, said many students do not feel safe on campus following Tuesday’s events, which she said made it even more important to speak out.
“We don’t want hate speech on our campus. We certainly don’t want hate speech bought and brought to our campus,” Darnell said. “We don’t want non-DePaul students to be able to come onto this campus and create chaos. We want an emergency plan. We want to feel safe.”
“And I think a lot of people don’t feel safe in their classrooms, outside their classrooms, in their dorms, they don’t feel safe intellectually, there’s more than one type of safety,” she said. “Everything from physical to intellectual safety has been threatened this past week. And people are tired of it.”
Many students said they felt, and were, personally attacked by people last week, whether on campus or on social media, by those who do not attend DePaul. Thoughts on Rev. Dennis Holtschneider, C.M.’s email to the university community were negative, with many saying they couldn’t believe he apologized to the Republicans and that he received much of the information second-hand since he was in Normandy, France. Many also said that the apology went to the wrong people.
“I don’t think that it was a very appropriate response at all,” said student Sydney Porter. “I think he should have addressed the students who were harmed instead of apologizing to Milo. He came to our campus.”
Many in the group, following their 10-minute long sit-in, would go the the BSU town hall, where a packed house of students discussed their experiences last week and next steps to ensure the harm many experienced never happens again.
“We won’t necessarily be in college forever, but some of us will be black forever, women forever, queer forever, brown forever … we don’t want to leave a negative legacy behind,” Darnell said. “And I think one of the things we really hope to accomplish is really highlighting what the Vincentian values really are, which are letting people who are oppressed, people who are underprivileged be seen, be known and be loved.”
At the town hall, students were able to speak about their experiences and address four administrators who were in the room listening.
University administrators, who included Provost Marten denBoer and Vice President for Institutional Diversity Liz Ortiz, spoke after students had the floor. They expressed an understanding for what students had said during the event, and also said they were working on measures at the policy level to address concerns stated throughout the night.
The issue of race relations and tension, as well as hearing the grievances brought forth by students of color in the week since Yiannopoulos came to campus and since other events over the year, remains unresolved.
Glen Curry, who attended the town hall, was glad that the forum happened and that plans for what’s next are in the making since change isn’t going to happen right away.
Anais Donald, a DePaul freshman, said the response from the administrators still felt they were making excuses and that the role of creating policies shouldn’t fall in the laps of students.
“I was happy to hear people speak and to have this unity,” Donald said. “But I think people shouldn’t have to do the administration’s job for them.”
While some student organizations have officially called for Holtschneider’s resignation, many in the meeting had an overall positive view of him despite consensus that his letter was disappointing.
Holtschneider and denBoer will meet with faculty in a closed-door meeting next week on the university’s Lincoln Park campus to discuss recent events. Students will not be allowed to attend.
John • Jun 4, 2016 at 8:57 am
Crybullies want intellectual safety. Sad
ChicagoJohn • Jun 3, 2016 at 11:13 am
There is so much to be depressed about in this story.
Firstly, that the students at the college apparently believe that the job of the University is to let them know that they are loved? I’m not a believer in the “tough love” concept in the slightest. But how did so many students get the idea that the job of the college is to reassure them?
Secondly, that 20 (or so) students believe that they represent the college, and that the college should cede to their demands.
Third, and most depressing, is that the college is coddling students who “don’t feel safe intellectually”. You feel like your ideas are being threatened? Good! Welcome to fricking college!
Fourth, that Milo’s speeches are being called hate speech. Based off of that, I went online and listened to him. I haven’t heard him threaten anyone. All he does is ridicule the type of people who would have a sit in because they felt “intellectually unsafe”. While funny, it is not a threat. How is that hate speech?
The heads of DePaul need to decide whether they are the heads of a high institution of learning, or a day care center with better plastic blocks to play with.
If your goal is the second? Congratulations! You can hand each kid a blue blankey, and they won’t have to worry about anything until they graduate and find out that not everyone feels the same as they do when they get out of their “intellectual safety bubble”.
If your goal is the first, isn’t it time to do the most intellectually dangerous thing of all? Which is to tell the kids “no”, I won’t do what you tell me?
Sven Åke Svensson • Jun 2, 2016 at 3:31 pm
Vincentian values really are, which are letting people who are oppressed, people who are underprivileged be seen, be known and be loved.
College Republicans are among those i believe.
When so many around the world tell you to open your eyes. Are they all wrong? Is it not hate speech to use that language that has been used against those that wanted to hear and question the speaker?
Take a mirror. Ask yourselvse the same questions you have for those you disaprove of.
Sneed Stankonia • Jun 2, 2016 at 2:42 pm
“We don’t want non-DePaul students to be able to come onto this campus and create chaos. We want an emergency plan. We want to feel safe.”
Is this quote from a student pointed at Milo, the DePaul-invited guest speaker, or Ed Ward, the whistle-blowing, aggressive weirdo that stormed the stage with absolutely nothing clear to say? Neither are DePaul students.
Isina Moska • Jun 2, 2016 at 11:16 am
“We won’t necessarily be in college forever, but some of us will be black forever, women forever, queer forever, brown forever … we don’t want to leave a negative legacy behind,”
You will be pathetic snowflakes forever who can’t tolerate the fact that not everyone agrees withyour preening precious virtue-signaling self-regard.
Oh my, did I ‘trigger’ you, poor baby?Want your diaper changed?