GUEST ROOM | Is Cornell Ready to Navigate the People’s Republic of China’s Political Challenges with Nuance?

GUEST ROOM | Is Cornell Ready to Navigate the People’s Republic of China’s Political Challenges with Nuance?

On a cold morning in Ithaca, I sat at CTB sipping coffee as breaking news flashed across my phone screen: a China-controlled Hong Kong court, citing the National Security Law, sentenced 45 pro-democracy activists to prison terms ranging from 50 months to 10 years. Not far away, the Trolley Foot Bridge, faintly visible in the distance, is often covered with stickers and posters — a battleground for political tensions. Five years ago, in 2019, during the eruption of the Anti-Extradition Law Amendment Bill Movement in Hong Kong, pro-Hong Kong students at Cornell University put up posters supporting the cause. Those posters were soon deliberately vandalized and destroyed by unknown individuals. 

In 2019, before I moved to Ithaca, when the protests in Hong Kong began to resonate within local communities and Hong Kong residents here started to speak out, many people with ties to China expressed sympathy for the Hong Kong community but were afraid to show direct support. Even a simple statement or a social media post felt too risky. This sense of distortion and dissonance has stayed with me over the past five years, growing ever stronger.

In June 2022, at the Ithaca Commons, a student wearing a Cornell University sweatshirt — believed to be a supporter of the Chinese Communist Party — was claimed to have violently attacked a Hong Kong student who was putting up posters advocating for Hong Kong and Uyghur human rights, leaving the student’s hand bloodied. A few months earlier, in March 2022, during a colloquium at the Cornell Institute of Public Affairs, Uyghur MA student and human rights activist Rizwangul Nurmuhammad was publicly bullied by dozens of Chinese students. Later, a leader of a Chinese student organization defended the walkout in a statement, astonishingly claiming that the Chinese students who disrupted the dialogue were the real victims, because “the atmosphere in that room was extremely hostile towards us.”


link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *