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- Campus Dispatch- Volume 7
Campus Dispatch- Volume 7
400+ days of genocide, 137+ journalists killed

Vol- 7 End of the Year Edition
Welcome to Campus Dispatch, an FSJP newsletter. Keeping you informed on what’s really happening at Portland State!
137+ Journalists Killed and Counting…
Without a free press, few other human rights are attainable. A strong press freedom environment encourages the growth of a robust civil society, which leads to stable, sustainable democracies and healthy social, political, and economic development.”
As members of a university community, access to information and knowledge underpins our most basic understandings of history, culture, and political formations. This access comes from many sources and networks, with journalism and first-hand accounts being central to any understanding of our world.
Since October 8, 2023, the Committee to Protect Journalists, the International Federation of Journalists, and the Palestinian Journalist Syndicate estimate that over 137 journalists and media workers have been killed in Palestinian territories of Gaza, the Occupied West Bank and Occupied East Jerusalem, and in Lebanon. It is the deadliest conflict for journalists and media workers since 1992, when the Committee to Protect Journalists began tracking journalists’ deaths. Over 70 journalists and media workers have been arrested in these areas, and within Israel, journalists, media workers, and media outlets have been censored and repressed by the government. This violence and repressive activity does not account for journalists covering related events in Syria, Iran, and Yemen.
We want to highlight the danger that journalists covering the latest Israeli-Palestinian-Lebanese war face, as well as the great journalism being done by The Vanguard on our own campus as they tell the stories of repression and disinformation within our own community.
To read and learn more about journalist casualties, media landscapes, and PSU’s Vanguard journalism:
https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20241007-one-year-of-war-in-gaza-deadliest-conflict-for-reporters/
Student Statement #1
Over the summer PSU began holding student conduct violation meetings. During these meeting students are asked if they would like to share any information, or make any comments about the accusations being levied against them. Below is one students response, printed with consent.
Statement: To the administrators of the so-called Portland State University,
I write to you over three months after students enacted a principled stance against our university’s complacency in the apartheid and genocide of the Palestinian people. Two months after students took the physical representation of the chains we all wear as the servants of the empire that you produce in this very university, as you suppress student dissent in favor of capital and your own barbaric egos, chains students then placed back around the door handles to the renamed Leila Khaled Hall on our campus.
I write to you just a month after administrators from the university reached out to the students they had gotten beaten and violated, in order to re-traumatize us and punish us more than we already have been. You might have assumed that the passage of time would qualm the attention on the situation, or that maybe we might have come to our senses and fallen to our knees in submission, as the president of our university has to the genocidal entities that line her bloody pockets. But unlike Ann Cudd, unlike those who fear the consequences of speaking up and taking a brave stance for human rights, I am not a coward who will bow my head to the monsters of this world, monsters that hold positions of authority at our very own university.
I answer your accusations of “misconduct” with the following:
First, you accuse me of “collusion”. You claim I enticed others to engage in the conduct I did. I find this statement to be hilarious. How do you pose yourself to be an institution that claims to teach its students about liberation and resistance, and then you act surprised when those same students take action on these very lessons you teach? Either you provide us nothing but oppressive filth in your classrooms to teaches us to bow our heads and never stand up for what we believe in, or the institution itself is guilty of this very accusation. Which one is it? I have only ever encouraged others to stand up for what is right, is that now a violation of the university’s academic conduct?
You told students to engage in nonviolent dissent.
We listened.
You punished us anyway.
Clearly it was never about how students protest, but specifically what they are protesting for.
Second, you claim that I engaged in “disruptive behavior”. I laugh at this accusation as a student who had my life interrupted by militant police violence at the hands of this very institution. Students sitting peacefully on the ground is more disruptive than beating us to the point where bones are broken and any sense of safety on this campus is diminished? The only disruption caused has been by the hands of the university, which only disrupted and destroyed our campus over the last few weeks of spring terms, as classes were canceled and students were beaten and trespassed from campus. The only disruption caused has been by the hands of the university that has held my academic transcripts at ransom, as I have been forced to forfeit a full-ride scholarship as a DAAD scholar to pursue graduate school in Berlin, Germany. The only disruption has been caused at the hands of a university that claims to serve first-generation students like me, while you have actively worked to disrupt and destroy mine. I have been forced to lose a law school acceptance to the University of Oregon as well as a graduate school acceptance to the University of Chicago. I sat in front of a door for a couple of hours, and so you destroyed my life for the remainder of it.
Even after all this, the university still continues to prevent me from healing as you continue to hold me captive to a flawed system of misconduct investigations, by the same department on campus that has sent students similar threatening letters for simply attending a peaceful rally on campus. By the same entity whose administrators laughed and smiled as I yelled out in pain from the force used against me in my arrest. By the same department who ignored my request to view the evidence submitted against me in this misconduct review for DAYS, and then reached out when it was too late to schedule anything before this hearing. That seems like pretty blatant retaliation and a violation of my rights to me. You just settled one lawsuit with me and walked right into another.
Third, you accuse me of engaging in “endangerment”. This is an accusation posed against students who were engaged in a peaceful poetry circle when the administrators of this university, Taylor Burke, to be specific, approached us to state that she “looked forward” for us to be detained by the police, police who then proceeded to violate and degrade us before physically assaulting one of us so bad that a student needed to have reconstruction surgery on their ACL and Meniscus, while admin stood around us smiling as we yelled out in pain. Is endangerment words? Or is endangerment the physical wounds we still continue to bear? Is endangerment the poetry we were peacefully reading as police arrived? Or is endangerment militarizing your campus and subjecting the student body to sexual, physical, and emotional violence that we have still not recuperated from, being as the university has acted as the greatest inhibitor of our healing.
Fourth, you accuse me of “failure to comply”. However, the university has had over 8 years to comply with the explicit demands of students who oppose our university supporting genocide and apartheid. You have not complied once. You have ignored resolutions passed within student government, motions made within the faculty senate, as well as public pressure that has been applied to the university by demonstrations that gather hundreds on our campus to continue to protest the very demands that students have championed for years. Who is truly guilty of failure to comply? Why do you hold students to a standard you do not even hold yourself to as administrators?
Fifth, you have stated I engaged in a “misuse of university property”. Name a single one of your items we touched, other than the door handles you removed in hopes that students would stop gather before them. Your police have touched far more places on our bodies than we have even walked on this college campus. Your police, who ripped off a student's religious headscarf and refused to return it back to me regardless of how much i cried being forced to strip down in front of male sheriffs officers.
Sixth, you claim I engaged in “obstruction”, while your officers themselves have openly targeted students and prevented us from safely accessing campus. We have been followed to our homes, intimidated, beaten to the point of needing surgery, and threatened by monsters such as Marcos Jimenez. Your employees and students who needed access to the Leila Khaled Hall were politely redirected to the multitude of other exits and entrances to the buildings. No one who needed to be inside was denied the opportunity to do so, whereas you continue to deny us the opportunity to safely access the campus that we pay to attend.
Seventh, you accuse us of violating the law. However resistance has always been criminalized by the supposed law. Revolutionaries have been condemned in the courts that someday honor them as heroes once they have been absolved by history and the masses. There are quotes from King on the walls of the (in)justice center downtown, although King himself was assassinated by our very own fascist police state and deemed a criminal while he was still alive. Nelson Mandela is deemed a hero by a country that has him on a terrorist watchlist for his resistance and activism with the African National Congress up until 2008. Our very existences are criminalized by the law. But the law is arbitrary, as you have proven. Beating students is okay, sexually assaulting us is okay, but standing against administrators is an injustice that you state is against the law? Students who chained similarly themselves in front of buildings that were also renamed on the campuses at Oregon State University and the University of Oregon were not met with police violence and arrest. Why is it only a crime when students on this campus do so?
Just like the Zionist entity you serve, every accusation from your mouth is a blatant confession.
Hold yourselves accountable to the same standards you attempt to impose on us.
I will not apologize for utilizing my campus to the fullest potential of an academic institution where learning must occur, regardless of what those who oppose the beauty of the resiliency of the student spirit do to hinder it, the same academic institution you turned into a battleground for police and university-sanctioned violence that has scarred many of us for life. Continue Reading….
Play Along With Us!
You’ve heard these phrases too often, “strategic plan", ”this is hard for all of us,” and “challenging times,” Sometimes it feels like we’re in a long bad joke. The least we can do is have some fun with it while calling out the administration. Play along with us! In PSU style, you get nothing if you “win” except for maybe a task force that will ultimately decide you didn’t win.

The Intercept: “How Universities Are Trying to Stop Another Year of Anti-War Activism,” December 2, 2024
![]() Palestinian flags are taken from protesters as they walk out of UNC Chapel Hill’s commencement ceremonies at Kenan Stadium in Chapel Hill, N.C., on May 11, 2024. Photo: Ethan Hyman/The News & Observer via AP | “Big public universities have historically been at the forefront of catalyzing activist movements, from the civil rights movement, to anti-Vietnam War protests to calls for divestment from apartheid-era South Africa. Now, these institutions are using legal action, disciplinary efforts, and campus rule changes to chill speech and dissent. (Read full article here) |
Yes Magazine: A Return to Leftist Self-Defense,” Nov 11, 2024
Community self-defense has become central to contemporary social movements. Just as their predecessors did, activists today seek a safety model that understands the threats they face and doesn’t reproduce the problems of the justice system. ...” (Read full article here) | ![]() Photo by Anadolu/Getty Images Since 2017, Portland has become a target for far-right militant groups courting altercations with anti-fascist activists, like this counterprotester who donned protective gear before approaching a Proud Boys rally in September 2020. |
Vanguard: “Students Facing Sanctions after Spring Protests,” November 11, 2024
![]() Parker Patnode/PSU Vanguard | “Following the spring 2024 protests, the conduct process was initiated for students alleged to have committed violations. Students received various penalties—referred to as academic sanctions—if found responsible. PSU Vanguard spoke with PSU’s chapter of Faculty and Staff for Justice in Palestine (FSJP) about the conduct process, sanctions and their advocacy for students. FSJP has assisted with about a dozen conduct cases.” (Read full article here) |

![]() | This series will provide an in-depth discussion of Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian’s work covering themes of Colonial and State Violence and necrocapitalism, Militarization and Surveillance, Gendered and Childhood Trauma, Resistance and Resilience and, Liberation and Anti-Colonial Theory. To register: https://www.southsouthmovement.org/reading-series-on-nadera-shalhoub-kevorkian/ |

IG@postcards_from_pdx
Ride in Solidarity with Gaza Sunbirds, December 7th, 2:30pm
Start and ends at Colonel Summers

IG @rosecityindivisible
Giving Market, Dec 14, Saturday Dec 14, 4212 NE Prescott
$$ Benefits Gaza, Sudan, and Congo

IG@alawdapdx
A Benefit Cocktail Hour- regional inspired cocktails, hors d’oeuvres, silent auction, and raffles. Funds raised will be donated to PCRF Portland, UNRWA & Network for Palestine. December 19, 2024, 6-9pm, 2222 NE Oregon St, Unit #110
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