Students for Monteiro hold second rally outside Sullivan Hall

More police officers were present at Sullivan Hall on April 16 than the protest a week earlier.

More police officers were present at Sullivan Hall on April 16 than the protest a week earlier. MARCUS MCCARTHY | TTN

Students for Monteiro, the student coalition supporting the reinstatement of African American studies professor Anthony Monteiro, marched around Main Campus and held a rally with other community protesters Wednesday, April 16.

In anticipation of the protest, Temple police officers were outside Anderson and Gladfelter halls and security guards were checking identification at the doors instead of inside.  The protesters did not march to these buildings.

More police officers were present at Sullivan Hall on April 16 than the protest a week earlier.

“We just want people to feel safe,” Acting Executive Director of Campus Safety Services Charlie Leone said. “We don’t know what [the protesters] are going to do. It’s just a precaution.”

Temple police officers were also posted at the entrance to Sullivan Hall and crowd control barriers were again in place on Beasley’s Walk by the time the protesters arrived an hour later.

Monteiro’s students and community members from his class “Philosophy and Black Liberation,” taught on Saturdays at the Church of the Advocate, attended the rally and joined in the march.

The protesters set up speakers outside Sullivan Hall and about 20 people spoke, including Glen Ford, executive editor at the Black Agenda Report, a Black Left site that Monteiro has contributed to before.

Monteiro, a non-tenure track associate African American studies professor, was notified in February that his contract would not be renewed for the next academic year. Students for Monteiro claimed the decision was a “retaliatory firing” in response to his activism and calls for the firing of College of Liberal Arts Dean Teresa Soufas, student representation on the Board of Trustees and better relations between Temple and the surrounding community.

The rally ended with a 15 minute speech from Monteiro. The protesters then went to meet and discuss their future plans.

Joe Brandt can be reached at jbrandt@temple.edu or on Twitter @JBrandt_TU.

Justice for Monteiro holds meeting at Church of the Advocate

Students and local residents held a meeting to discuss their support for ousted African American studies professor Anthony Monteiro, as well as issues surrounding Temple’s relationship with the nearby community at the Church of the Advocate Tuesday night, March 19.

The meeting, which was conducted by members of the group Justice for Monteiro, lasted more than two hours and focused around a group of demands the students have made to the university during ongoing discussions.

Among the strongest of the demands are the reinstatement of Monteiro to the African American studies department with full tenure – a position he did not hold when his contract was not renewed this January – and the firing of Dean Teresa Soufas, who signed off on Monteiro’s removal.

Unlike previous meetings held by the group, Monteiro was not in attendance at Tuesday’s meeting. Kashara White, a senior African American studies major led the discussion, which ranged from Temple’s impact on local housing developments to the ability of students to vote upon university matters.

In order to pressure the university into complying with the demands, the protesters discussed a number of demonstrations, including public protests during Experience Temple Days, when prospective students visit Main Campus, as well as sit-down demonstrations on Broad Street and Cecil B. Moore Avenue.

No agreement was reached for a specific type or date of demonstration, though a vote was held to create an “agitation committee” and discuss ideas at a later meeting.

During the meeting, Anthony Pressley, an African American studies student, further called for the group to demand the firing of African American studies Chairman Molefi Asante for his role in Monteiro’s dismissal.

Monteiro had been a public advocate for the promotion of Asante to department chair last spring, as well as a outspoken critic of Dean Soufas, who had placed Jayne Drake, a white woman, as interim chair of the department in 2012.

Many of Monteiro’s supporters also held public demonstrations in support of Asante last spring, but at Tuesday’s meeting the favor seemed to have swayed, with several voicing agreement with Pressley in their condemnation of Asante.

Ultimately, no vote was taken by the students whether or not to add Asante’s removal to their list of demands.

After concluding their meeting, the students agreed to a tentative plan to meet at the same time on March 25, though no location was set.

Students protest African American Studies chair

Members of Temple’s African American Studies Department held a rally in front of the Bell Tower today in protest of the appointment of Jayne Drake, a white woman, as chairwoman of the department.

The rally, which was held between 4 p.m. and 5 p.m., featured undergraduate and graduate student speakers, as well as many speakers from the North Philadelphia community.

“We just hope to put pressure on the university so that they can have more respect for minority studies, and that’s all disciplines, africana studies, asian studies, women’s studies, queer studies,” said Sabrina Sample, a political science major who is minoring in African American studies.

One protester at the event stood in silence, waving two large Pan-African flags, one sign held by a protester read “save black studies.”

Ronald Amour, a local community activist, spoke at the event and helped introduce several of the other speakers. Amour complemented the crowd that had gathered in from of the tower, saying that the diversity of the students assembled showed solidarity with the people in the African American studies department.

The crowd was openly critical of Teresa Soufas, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, for appointing Drake to the head of the African American studies department. They called for Molefi Asante, the former chairperson and current professor in the department, to be given the appointment as the popular decision among the departments students.

The crowds repeatedly broke out in chants of “We want Asante,” and “Soufas must go.” Several speakers at the event, which was open mic, accused Soufas of being a “racist,” and irresponsive to the needs and wishes of the professors and students in the department.