Trump administration

Columbia student Mahdawi on detention: ‘I have faith that justice will prevail'

The Columbia student and U.S. permanent resident spoke to NPR's "Morning Edition" from the correctional facility where he's been held following his April 14 arrest

Mohsen Mahdawi speaks at a protest at Columbia University on Nov. 9, 2023.
Mukta Joshi / Getty Images file

In his first comments to the media since his  detainment during his naturalization interview in Vermont, Columbia student Mohsen Mahdawi said he had faith that he won't be deported.

Mahdawi, a 34-year-old U.S. permanent resident who was born and raised in a refugee camp in the West Bank, spoke to from the Northwest State Correctional Facility in St. Albans, Vermont. He was accompanied by one of his attorneys.

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"I'm centered, internally I am at peace," Mahdawi, wearing gold-rimmed glasses and a blue uniform, told NPR. "While I still know deeply that this is a level of injustice that I am facing, I have faith. I have faith that justice will prevail."

Mohsen Mahdawi speaks at a protest at Columbia University on Nov. 9, 2023.
Mohsen Mahdawi speaks at a protest at Columbia University on Nov. 9, 2023. (Mukta Joshi / Getty Images file)

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Mahdawi explained he has faith because of the people using their voices to condemn his arrest. But also because he believes "in the system of democracy" in the U.S. and is inspired by the resilience of Gazans, who, he said, despite experiencing genocide, have kept their faith.

Growing up in the al-Fara’a refugee camp, Mahdawi witnessed Israeli military violence and was shot in the leg at 15 by an Israeli soldier, according to court documents. He emigrated to the U.S. over a decade ago and began attending Columbia University in 2021, where last year he became a key organizer of pro-Palestinian protests on campus. 

He told NPR that "freedom was just a concept" to him before he moved to the U.S. from the Israeli-occupied West Bank. He added that his freedom is now in jeopardy following his arrest.

"I think this is a red flag, not only to me, but to the American people who care about freedom, the right to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness," Mahdawi said, quoting the Declaration of Independence. "I have the hope that this country will fulfill its promise."

Mahdawi walked into what he thought was the final step to becoming a U.S. citizen April 14.

He told NPR that he believed it could be "a trap" — especially after another passport-holder,, had been detained a month earlier. Mahdawi, however, still showed up at an empty embassy and was told he wasn't scheduled for a naturalization interview. He was arrested by ICE agents who were masked and visibly armed, per court filings.

Mahdawi told NPR that he was worried the agents were taking him to Louisiana, as they had done with Khalil, isolating him from his community and legal support in Vermont, where he is a resident. They missed the flight by a few minutes, and Mahdawi's attorneys were able to persuade a judge to detain him in Vermont, a decision the .

Mahdawi’s attorneys have since argued that the Trump administration has violated his First Amendment right to free speech. They did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Now sitting in a Vermont correctional facility, Mahdawi invoked a Martin Luther King Jr. quote in his interview with NPR: "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere."

"The injustice that I am facing here, and the injustice that the anti-war movement is facing, is also connected to the injustice that the Palestinian people are going through," he said. "We're talking about 55,000 people who have been killed. We see children being killed, amputated, losing their parents, no homes. This is what's moving us."

And U.S. officials, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, claiming that Mahdawi's "presence and activities in the United States would have serious adverse foreign policy consequences," is a form of gaslighting, he said.

"The government is gaslighting the American people and especially the American Jewish communities," he said. "In fact, we had so many Jews and Israelis who actually joined us in saying 'Ceasefire now.' So, they are actually weaponizing antisemitism in order to destroy the hope that America has, which is universities and liberal institutions."

Representatives for the White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Mahdawi added that he still wants to be an American despite all of this — and that he has demonstrated his will and desire to become one.

"I want to also remind everybody, the definition of the government in the Constitution," he said. "'We The People,' and I am counting on the people who I've got the chance to know as kind hearted, good people, to stand up for what is right."

A judge will decide whether Mahdawi will be released or deported at a hearing scheduled for Wednesday, April 30.

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