University Life

Statement on recent tragedies

Patriots,

For many in our community, the last month has been particularly troubling as our nation and world have weathered horrific tragedies, most recently with Friday’s release of the video showing the murder of Tyre Nichols. It followed massacres in Monterrey Park and Half Moon Bay, California, which themselves occurred amid a backdrop of thousands of American deaths in January by gun violence, and a constant stream of violence and death from wars and ethnic strife around the world.

Each drumbeat of such violence strikes all-too-familiar and deeply personal chords of pain in the communities of victims who are involved. Collectively, they take a toll on us all. 

As we continue to process, reflect, and respond to recent events, I want you to remember the many resources at Mason available to support your mental health and well-being. Resources are listed below along with accompanying links. They exist for you, so please use them if they can be of help.

 

For Students:

Counseling and Psychological Center (CAPS) – in-person or virtual counseling appointments

Within CAPS, specific resources include

The Steve Fund  – dedicated to supporting the mental health and emotional well-being of students of color.

TimelyCare at Mason  provides virtual mental health for students 24/7.

You may download the app for easier access.

Anti-Racism and self-help resources 

 

Center for Culture, Equity, and Empowerment 

Center for the Advancement of Well-Being

Student Support and Advocacy Center 

 

For Faculty and Staff:

Center for Psychological Services (CPS) Emotional Support Line

Employee Assistance Program 

For those who are available and able, many of us will come together in community today (Monday) at 5 p.m. for the annual MLK Evening of Reflection: Lighting the Pathway. The event, hosted by the Center for Culture, Equity, and Empowerment, includes panelists Aniyah Vines, Breya Johnson, Mark Hopson, and Samaria Rice. Register to attend here.

Take good care of yourselves and each other.

 

Sincerely,

Gregory Washington

President

Mason to host the ARIE Conference on Oct. 24

The inaugural Anti-Racism and Inclusive Excellence (ARIE) Conference will be held on Monday, Oct. 24 from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. at Mason Square in Arlington. The event will provide a forum for higher education, industry, government, non-profit and other changemakers to discuss pathways to better access, justice, equity and inclusion for all.

Register and learn more

MLK Evening encourages living with ‘dangerous unselfishness’

Mason hosted its annual MLK Evening of Reflection and Spirit of King Awards ceremony on Tuesday, Feb. 15. The event honors the memory of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and recognizes members of the Mason community who actively live out his vision.

Learn more about the program.

Read about the Spirit of King award recipients.

Moving forward after the Derek Chauvin trial

Dear Patriots,

The verdict is in on the Derek Chauvin trial, and he has been held accountable for the injustice that occurred to George Floyd. We can breathe a collective sigh of relief that jurors reached the verdict they did.  With that being said, the nation must sustain its quest for systemic change to its criminal justice system, to ultimately make such episodes exceedingly rare. This verdict is not a replacement for systemic change.  Rather, it makes space for us to move ahead. We still have much work to do in this regard.

This verdict was about more than an individual trial, and it will provoke reactions across many ideologies. It is important to note the humanitarian aspect of what was on trial.  While we were not in-person eyewitnesses to the event that took place on May 25, 2020, there were many people of all races and ethnicities who were at the scene and provided commentary that something was wrong. The outcome of this case mirrored the sentiment of the individuals present at the scene.

As a university community, we are committed to all points of view. Our adage of Freedom and Learning is a powerful thing in moments like this, and I encourage everyone to exercise their First Amendment rights to free expression responsibly.  Speech that brings harm, violence, or destruction of property is not appropriate and we have an obligation to ensure our community remains a safe place to live, study, and express ourselves.

Some members of our community may find themselves in need of help processing the events of the day. We have services that exist to help, including the Employee Assistance Program, Counseling And Psychological Services, and the Center for Culture, Equity, and Empowerment. If you feel that engaging any of these services will help, I encourage you to seek them out.

As a community, we must be sustained by those things that united us so we are not divided by our disagreements.  For it is only through thoughtful, tolerant and respectful discourse that we can develop solutions that strengthen and progress our humanity.

Gregory Washington
President

Message from Dr. Creston Lynch

As we continue to grapple with and process the rise of  violence against the Asian and Asian American community, University Life units – in cooperation with other campus community members – are offering spaces for support, processing, and solidarity for the Mason community. Please see the information below.

Friday, March 19 (Today) 11:30am – Drop-in style guided dialogue for Students & Community Members

  • Mason’s Center for Culture, Equity, and Empowerment (CCEE) is acknowledging the recent attacks against the Asian American community in the Greater Atlanta area. We stand in solidarity with all APIDA members of the Mason family and strongly condemn these acts of violence. Today, many people in the Mason Community woke up to fear, sadness, anger, anxiety, and uncertainty as they grappled with this very intentional act of violence. We will be holding support spaces today. See the session’s Zoom Link here.

Friday, March 19 & Monday, March 22

  • The Center for the Advancement for Well-Being is hosting a unique Racial Healing Circle experience that is focused on lament as we process the rise in anti-Asian racism and the recent murders of 6 Asian women in Atlanta. We welcome the Asian and Asian American community at Mason to this space to partake in the healing work of expressing grief and fear, sharing stories, and being in a supportive community that affirms your worth. Members of other racial identities are welcome to join in solidarity, lament, and listening. Register here for the Zoom links.

We are grateful to our colleagues for working together and intentionally to create this needed space for our community.

In Solidarity,

Creston C. Lynch, Ph.D. | Assistant Vice President
University Life
George Mason University
703.993.2884

Stop Asian Hate Support Spaces

Mason’s Center for Culture, Equity, and Empowerment (CCEE) is acknowledging the recent attacks against the Asian community in the Greater Atlanta area. We stand in solidarity with all APIDA members of the Mason family and strongly condemn these acts of violence. Today, many people in the Mason Community woke up to fear, sadness, anger, anxiety, and uncertainty as they grappled with this very intentional act of violence. As of this morning, we have learned the names of just some of the victims and those injured:

Ms. Yaun, Xiaojie Tan, Daoyou Feng, Paul Andre Michels and Elcias R. Hernandez-Ortiz.

Find Support Spaces

President Washington: We stand with our Asian community after senseless act of violence in Atlanta

Dear Patriots,

Tuesday’s mass murder in Atlanta returns us to terrible, familiar ground, as we try again to make sense of violence, and calm the terror that was already building within an entire cultural community.

Whether it was intentional or incidental that six of the eight victims were Asian-American women, the tragedy has had the same effect. These vicious killings have shaken the nation’s Asian communities to their cores. The murders came as hate and violence rise against communities scapegoated for the pandemic. The increase in reported attacks mark another painful moment in the long history of exclusion, segregation, and violence in America.

Two weeks ago, we held our second university town hall addressing anti-racism and inclusive excellence at Mason. Tuesday’s acts of targeting and violence remind us how much is riding on that vital work. Because today, members of our Asian communities feel unsafe in their own places of business, their own neighborhoods, and their own homes.

To the Asian communities at George Mason University, I offer this: Mason is your home, and you are loved and supported here. Your safety and sense of belonging are of utmost importance to everyone. As always, our personnel are on watch to ensure your security and wellbeing, so you can resume what you came here to do: to simply learn, live, and grow to your fullest potential.

Sincerely,

Gregory Washington
President

Task force presents recommendations at first town hall

An advisory board to promote community policing, a required foundational course on diversity and inclusion, and a university-wide infrastructure to promote and enhance anti-racism, diversity, equity, and inclusion were among the recommendations put forward by members of Mason’s Anti-Racism and Inclusive Excellence Task Force at a virtual town hall on Feb. 23. Find out more about the recommendations. Watch the presentation.

Reflecting on Dr. King’s determination and resolve

Fellow Patriots:

This holiday weekend overflows with irony. When I think of any march on Washington, the image that immediately comes to mind is that of Martin Luther King Jr., arguably America’s greatest leader of non-violent social change, at the base of the Lincoln Memorial.

Contrast that with the images of the more than 25,000 soldiers who currently occupy our capital as a direct result of what former Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund described as a “violent attack … unlike any I have experienced in my 30 years in law enforcement here in Washington, D.C.”

This irony creates many more questions than answers: How did a protest that was supposed to dispute an election get corrupted with guns, multiple Confederate flags, and racists and anti-Semitic slogans? The lack of a meaningful outcry from the protestors and their supporters that these elements did not represent their ideals left many to believe the protestors were in support of the vandalism, hatred and anti-American symbols and sentiments. It’s really illuminating that these were some of the very issues that King fought against.

How can we make sense of a nation that suddenly needs 25,000 troops in its capital just to safeguard the peaceful transition of power from one president to the next?

Is there really an equivalency between the protest in Washington, D.C. this summer following the deaths Ahmaud Arbery, George Floyd, and Breonna Taylor, and the protest on January 6th? Did law enforcement treat these entities as equivalent?

And how on earth do we make sense of this at a time when we are supposed to be reflecting and taking meaningful action toward nonviolent social advancement?

I have found inspiration in the teachings of Dr. King himself, particularly from his Letter From Birmingham City Jail. He wrote it in 1963 as he sat in solitary confinement, having been arrested for peacefully protesting the oppressive segregation of Bull Connor’s Birmingham.

He is described as having felt despair and panic in his isolation. It is evident that many Americans share this sentiment today whether they are protesting police brutality or the election results.

During King’s incarceration, a sympathetic guard smuggled him a newspaper, which contained a scathing open letter to him from eight local clergy, who condemned him as an “extremist,” and his protests as “unwise and untimely.”

Out of his despair, he regained resolve and penned his now-immortal response. Three points in particular resonate with me on this weekend, and I invite you to reflect on them, as well:

Reject violence, no matter what.

In his letter, he described how he and his fellow protestors had to steel themselves for the violence they knew their peaceful protests would draw out. He would tell them: “We adopt the means of nonviolence because our end is a community at peace with itself.”

King goes further to remind us that, “Returning violence for violence multiplies violence, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.” These statements were lessons for his followers at that time but are equally true in this moment.

Progress toward social justice is not automatic.

“Human progress never rolls in on wheels of inevitability,” Dr. King wrote from his jail cell. It takes constant work and the effective use of time. “We must use time creatively, in the knowledge that the time is always ripe to do right. … Now is the time to lift our national policy from the quicksand of racial injustice to the solid rock of human dignity.”

As we prepare to inaugurate a new president, we have reached a moment of sobering national reckoning about who we have been, who we are, and therefore, in time, who we might become. Just as we were told after each mass shooting over the last decade that “now is not the time” to address the root causes of gun violence in America, Dr. King was chided that his social movement was “untimely.” Waiting was always the advice he would receive, and thankfully reject.

We were not ready for the events of January 6. We as a nation will never be ready, or be comfortable, with the gut-wrenching truths that these events and the social justice events of 2020 now demand that we examine. It is time to stop waiting until we are “ready,” because such a comfortable moment will never present itself.

We are all extremists.

Dr. King initially bristled at being called out as an “extremist.” Then he thought more deeply about it and concluded that anyone who believes wholly in their cause will be characterized as an extremist. And so, he embraced his mantle as an extremist for love, justice, and equality.

“So, the question is not whether we will be extremists, but what kind of extremists we will be,” he wrote. “Will we be extremists for hate or for love? Will we be extremists for the preservation of injustice or for the extension of justice?”

So, Patriots, in keeping with this holiday as a day “on” and not a day “off,” here is a homework assignment for all of us: How can we be extremists for love and the extension of justice? Because today is ripe to do right.

Gregory Washington
President

Getting real about racism, diversity and inclusion

Understanding what anti-racism, diversity and inclusion mean for George Mason University was just one of the goals of Monday’s Freedom and Learning forum hosted by President Gregory Washington.

Ensuring a common definition of the terms helps create meaningful dialogue, and helps the Mason community understand the work of the Anti-Racism and Inclusive Excellence Task Force. The group was formed by Washington in response to both the high-profile death of George Floyd at the hands of police and the nationwide racial justice movement.

“We shouldn’t – we cannot – run away from these discussions,” Washington said. “We have to have engagement on these topics.”

Read more about the Freedom and Learning Forum