Leila Fadel
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Happy you join us tomorrow. I'm now my uncle.
I feel like the other day somebody was like, are you going to Vermont for skiing? And I texted wrong and I said, I'm not going for a skiing. And she was like, who are you? Okay, anyways. Hope you join us again tomorrow.
I feel like the other day somebody was like, are you going to Vermont for skiing? And I texted wrong and I said, I'm not going for a skiing. And she was like, who are you? Okay, anyways. Hope you join us again tomorrow.
I feel like the other day somebody was like, are you going to Vermont for skiing? And I texted wrong and I said, I'm not going for a skiing. And she was like, who are you? Okay, anyways. Hope you join us again tomorrow.
Well, A, this is where he lives, where he calls home. And I sat down with him in the state prison where he's being held since there are no immigration detention centers here. And the first thing I asked when he walked into the room where I was waiting was, how are you?
Well, A, this is where he lives, where he calls home. And I sat down with him in the state prison where he's being held since there are no immigration detention centers here. And the first thing I asked when he walked into the room where I was waiting was, how are you?
Well, A, this is where he lives, where he calls home. And I sat down with him in the state prison where he's being held since there are no immigration detention centers here. And the first thing I asked when he walked into the room where I was waiting was, how are you?
And when he says Justice A, he means his release and his ability to stay in this country. His lawyers filed a petition in federal court here in Vermont accusing government officials of violating his First Amendment right to free speech and due process in what they argue is a policy by these officials to silence Palestinian rights advocates.
And when he says Justice A, he means his release and his ability to stay in this country. His lawyers filed a petition in federal court here in Vermont accusing government officials of violating his First Amendment right to free speech and due process in what they argue is a policy by these officials to silence Palestinian rights advocates.
And when he says Justice A, he means his release and his ability to stay in this country. His lawyers filed a petition in federal court here in Vermont accusing government officials of violating his First Amendment right to free speech and due process in what they argue is a policy by these officials to silence Palestinian rights advocates.
Yeah, I mean, it was kind of a roller coaster. I mean, he's lived here for 10 years and he was on track to graduate next month with a bachelor's from Columbia. And he went to this meeting thinking, he would finally become an American citizen.
Yeah, I mean, it was kind of a roller coaster. I mean, he's lived here for 10 years and he was on track to graduate next month with a bachelor's from Columbia. And he went to this meeting thinking, he would finally become an American citizen.
Yeah, I mean, it was kind of a roller coaster. I mean, he's lived here for 10 years and he was on track to graduate next month with a bachelor's from Columbia. And he went to this meeting thinking, he would finally become an American citizen.
After growing up in a Palestinian refugee camp in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, he says he only understood the concept of freedom of movement or freedom of speech without retaliation from living here. But because he had watched the experiences of other students, he knew there was a risk.
After growing up in a Palestinian refugee camp in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, he says he only understood the concept of freedom of movement or freedom of speech without retaliation from living here. But because he had watched the experiences of other students, he knew there was a risk.
After growing up in a Palestinian refugee camp in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, he says he only understood the concept of freedom of movement or freedom of speech without retaliation from living here. But because he had watched the experiences of other students, he knew there was a risk.
See what?
See what?
See what?
And despite that, he says he's in prison, although the government wasn't able to move him to Louisiana like other students, at least not yet, because of an injunction a judge granted here.