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Susana Ramirez, a Freedom University student, served as the student-appointed Chancellor of the Board of Regents. “Students are here today to help the Board of Regents fulfill its mission of creating ‘a more educated Georgia,’” Ramirez says. “We are holding a hearing to present the public with the facts of the admissions bans, and to initiate public discussion on the moral implications and economic impact of modern segregation in higher education in Georgia.”
Dr. Laura Emiko Soltis, the Executive Director of Freedom University, says the courage of the students is inspiring. “Students are essentially schooling the Georgia Board of Regents,” she says. “They are sending a powerful message that undocumented students know their history and they know their human rights. In Georgia, we have a situation where thousands of DACA recipients, who are overwhelmingly people of color, can legally drive to low-wage jobs but be denied the right to education and the right to vote. This is a new variation of an old system in the South, and the students know this. They know that the same universities that ban undocumented students today banned Black students in 1960. Most importantly, they know that students defeated educational segregation then and students will defeat it now.”
Asma Elhuni, a student participant who attends Georgia State University, says, “I am one of thousands of students enrolled in Georgia public universities who oppose the admissions bans. Undocumented students are absent from our college classrooms, not because of their academic merit, but because of where they were born. They pay taxes. They are our neighbors. This ban only functions to punish young people. But students are united: to attack one group of students is to attack all of us. We will continue to fight for equal access to education until we win.”
The student-led Board of Regents announced a nationwide economic boycott of the state of Georgia at the conclusion of its hearing. Soon afterward, Georgia Capitol Police arrested seven students on charges of criminal trespassing. They are now being held at Fulton County Jail. Please donate generously to the Georgia Civil Disobedience Fund linked here, which is organized to support their release.
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