San Diego State Student Charged with Harassment for Patriotism
Student's Crime Was Objecting to Muslim Students' Joy at September 11th Attacks

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November 5, 2001  
by Dan Flynn

Is it a hate crime for an American to voice his objection to Middle Easterners celebrating the September 11th attacks on America? At San Diego State University, it apparently is.

On September 22, Zewdalem Kebede, a recent immigrant to America from Ethiopia, was studying in the campus library when he overheard a group of Saudi Arabian students discussing the suicide bombings of the Pentagon and the World Trade Center. "They started talking about the September 11 action," Kebede recalls. "And with that action they were very pleased. They were happy." The anti-American group, speaking in Arabic, thought that no one would be able to hear what they were saying.

Kebede, who speaks fluent Arabic, surprised the anti-American students by interrupting their conversation in their native tongue.

"Guys, what you are talking about is unfair. How do you feel happy when those 5 to 6,000 people are buried in two or three buildings?" Kebede said to the students. "You are proud of [the terrorists]. You should have to feel shame." Kebede claims that he addressed his fellow students in Arabic because he didn't want to embarrass them in front of others.

A Saudi student sitting at a nearby table then angrily confronted Kebede in English. The ensuing conversation grew heated, with the Saudi accusing the recently naturalized American of objecting to students speaking Arabic. Shortly thereafter, Kebede and the Saudi students went their separate ways.

Thirty minutes later, the police came-for Kebede! They informed him that a complaint had been issued against him. Soon, the university's Center for Student Rights ordered him to attend a disciplinary meeting because, it was alleged, he had been "verbally abusive to other students." He received a letter ordering him to respond to his accusers or face sanctions. Outraged, the Ethiopian immigrant went public with his story in a class. The University subsequently backed off the charges and concluded the matter with an October 9th letter threatening disciplinary action against the political science senior.

"You are admonished to conduct yourself as a responsible member of the campus community in the future," San Diego State's missive warned. That's precisely what some would say that Kebede was doing on September 22nd when he castigated those who celebrated the mass-murder of more than 5,000 people.

In the topsy-turvy world of the American campus, expressing glee at the deaths of thousands of Americans is protected free speech. Objecting to such utterances is classified as "harassment." Appreciation for diversity, tolerance, and sensitivity is thrown out the window when it comes to dealing with patriotic students.

Unfortunately, what happened to Zewdalem Kebede at San Diego State is not an isolated incident. While the media is awash in stories about hate crimes-both real and imagined-committed against foreigners, there has been a complete whitewash of the harassment of patriotic students on campus by faculty and administrators.

Daniel J. Flynn serves as the executive director of Accuracy in Academia and editor of Campus Report.