I’m sitting on a camping stool just behind the right part of the front gate. I see staff and faculty trying to get on campus and the football players, in their most valiant defensive stop of the season, are blocking them from getting in. I see five news vans parked on the other side of the street. I see tired students lugging their blankets and pillows already blackened by the road. They’ve been there since 3 am this morning.

So have I.

I was working on my homework late last night when a friend of mine told me, “They’re locking down the university.”

“Are you serious?”

“Yes.”

I ran inside my house, grabbed my sweatshirt, and made my way over as quickly as I could.

You see, in the last few days, I’ve been convinced. I’ve joined the fight.

On Monday morning, the world-renown Gallaudet Linguistics department (most of the professors, staff, and some students) met and had an open dialogue about what was happening. Half of the faculty have been here for more than twenty years. They’ve known things have been wrong here for many years. I didn’t realize that. They talked about how they’ve tried to get Gallaudet to recognize that ASL is the language used and should be used on campus. I didn’t realize that. They talked about how they’ve tried talking to the administration but to little avail. I didn’t realize that.

I’ve spent most of my life accepting that things were the way they were just because that’s how it is. In Africa, I saw many horrible things. How I dealt with it? “That’s how it is.” For most of my school life, I didn’t receive equal access. “That’s how it is.” At Gallaudet, I saw that someone not right for the position was chosen for the next president. “That’s how it is.”

I’m done with feeling ambivalent, of not doing anything, of saying “that’s how it is.” And it seems that everyone else here at the protest feels that way.

As my friend, Cecily Whitworth, wrote for a possible response to the recent Washington Post editorial: I’m “increasingly angered, frustrated, and saddened by the continuous dissembling, misdirection, and suppression of information on the part of the current administration of Gallaudet University. This behavior confirms that there is, indeed, substance to the protesting students’ claims about flawed process. The easy and clear way out of this increasingly messy situation is for the Gallaudet University Board of trustees to re-open the search process for the next president of the university.”

And that’s why I’ve been here since 3 am this morning.


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