4 CULTURE
9 OPINION
Catch Some Z’s at The Dreamery
What NYU Gets Wrong About Confronting Racism
6 ARTS
Netflix Could Be Influencing the Next Election
10 SPORTS
Yes, NYU Has Cheerleaders
VOLUME LII | ISSUE 4
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2019
Hedges Encourages Reflection on NYUAD got back home? Matthew Hedges: At times it has been really hard to adjust. Having family and support has been such a huge help, and it has gradually gotten easier, but it hasn’t been smooth. We’re keeping ourselves calm by keeping ourselves busy. If we take our foot off the pedal, we stop doing things, then it’ll take a long time to get back on the saddle. I’ve already started the last chapter of my thesis because it’s such a big deal for us in our lives. It’s only the natural thing to do.
COURTESY OF MATTHEW HEDGES AND DANIELA TEJADA
Matthew Hedges, a British doctoral student who was imprisoned last year in the UAE, and his wife, Daniela Tejada, at their wedding.
By VICTOR PORCELLI and MEGHNA MAHARISHI News Editors British doctoral student Matthew Hedges was tortured last year during a months-long interrogation period and subsequently sentenced to life imprisonment in the United Arab Emirates on the grounds of spying charges. Hedges, who was conducting research in the country for his Ph.D., was granted clemency by the Emirati government shortly
after his sentencing following international pressure. Hedges’ arrest led to increased scrutiny on academic freedom at NYU’s Abu Dhabi campus. Over 200 faculty members signed a petition urging President Andrew Hamilton to condemn the sentencing and some of the petition’s signatories hosted a forum on academic freedom at NYUAD. This January, university spokesperson John Beckman responded to these criticisms in a statement to NBC, maintaining that academ-
ic freedom at NYUAD was preserved. Hamilton, in an email to the faculty who signed the letter, said he spoke about Hedges’ sentencing with senior officials in the Abu Dhabi government and the vice chancellor of Durham University. WSN had the opportunity to speak with Hedges and his wife, Daniela Tejada, about their experiences and thoughts on the current state of academic freedom in the UAE. What has it been like after you
What are your specific plans moving forward, other than finishing your thesis? Are there other plans you have that you want to accomplish in the future? Daniela Tejada: Personally, our first priority after Matt’s Ph.D. completion is starting treatments, medical treatments for the two of us. We’ve both been through a lot in the past year or so with what happened to Matt, and it would be paramount to our health to be able to start treatment. [We need] to not just process what happened to us as a couple, and as individuals, but particularly, in Matt’s case, to recover from the PTSD that resulted from it. Another big personal [priority] for us is raising awareness about academic freedom and the rights of scholars — not just in the UAE or the gulf — but worldwide. We feel that Matt’s work was heavily misunderstood, and he had to pay a big and unjust price for it. A lot of academics worldwide have to under-
go many similar situations, nearly on a weekly basis.
According to a 2018 report published by Scholars at Risk — an organization headquartered at NYU that seeks to protect scholars and advocate for academic freedom — there were 294 reported attacks on higher education in 47 countries from Sept. 2017 to Aug. 2018. 167 of these attacks led to killings, violence, disappearances or imprisonment. SAR also reported that at least 875 students were either killed, arrested or subjected to “coercive force” because of “their expressive activity.” The UAE government convicted economist Nasser bin Ghaith on charges including violating the country’s counterterrorism law and sentenced him to 10 years in prison in March 2017. In December, it was reported by multiple news outlets that Ghaith had been on a twoand-a-half month long hunger strike and his health was deteriorating, causing concern among human rights organizations. Do you feel like people are still talking enough about the UAE and the issues that came up after this? MH: Previously, this kind of discussion would have ended. I think with what they and other countries in that region have been doing, there seems to be a sea [of] change. There’s a lot more scrutiny on their activities and what they’re doing, and I find it fascinating that it hasn’t died down. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2
The Stern Graduate Who Chose Maui Over Wall Street By ELIF KESIKBAS Staff Writer Bored of the traditional mindset that surrounds the Stern School of Business, Rachel Lee wanted to explore what lay outside the bubble of future finance workers. She took a semester off before her senior year, walked into Mischief Tattoo on West Fourth Street and asked for a piercing apprenticeship — while her peers were running after Wall Street’s biggest names. Lee, originally in the Stern class of 2018, graduated this past fall with a B.S. in business with a concentration in marketing. She is currently working remotely as Marketing Project Manager for the Hawaii-based cannabis dispensary PONO Life Maui. She is island hopping in March, leaving Manhattan for new adventures. Her journey began with a familiar story — finance
and accounting. But as her school career unfolded, Lee realized that she did not want to follow the tradition track. “I kind of figured out my path later on,” Lee said. “There should be some sort of thing freshman year that’s like the options are not just finance. No one ever said that, starting off. That’s why you just feel pressured.” Lee took off the second semester of her first year to work as a full-time project manager at a digital marketing startup. She returned to NYU in the fall, still focused on finance, and stayed on her original path by working at a financial services company the summer after her sophomore year. During the January term of her junior year, Lee studied abroad at NYU Shanghai and worked on a protocol app that was designed to improve quality of life for the elderly. She decided to take another semester off in favor of a piercing apprenticeship before returning to
complete her degree. “Honestly, as parents each time when she took the gap year and semester, we had questions, doubts and worries and our own plan held within our heart because we know Rachel as an individual has to explore her own blueprint of her life,” said Lee’s mother, Melissa Lee. However, Lee was confident that her tattoo shop experience would benefit her. “We spend all our lives kind of sheltered,” Lee said. “Work at a tattoo shop and have this scary looking dude coming in and pierce his nose. What are you gonna do? You have to grow some balls, basically. You have to be really confident and sure of yourself.” A semester later, Lee resumed studies, and even though she had decided that corporate life was not for her, she forced herself to complete her whole junior year recruiting for consulting. CONTINUED ON PAGE 4
Recent Stern graduate Rachel Lee.
ALINA PATRICK | WSN