Members of UChicago United for Palestine (UCUP), Southside Together, and the Fight Back UChicago Campaign held a briefing on the arrest and eviction of two UChicago undergraduates on Wednesday afternoon. At the briefing, UCUP identified fourth-year Mamayan Jabateh as one of two students arrested by CPD in connection with the October 11 UCUP protest. Previously, UCUP had referred to Jabateh as “Student B.”
Jabateh said that four CPD officers approached and handcuffed them at Renee Granville-Grossman Residential Commons. According to Jabateh, no resident heads or resident deans were present at the arrest.
Jabateh said they were in custody for over 30 hours, from approximately 5 p.m. on Wednesday, December 11, until 11 p.m. on Thursday, December 12.
According to documents obtained by the Maroon through a Freedom of Information Act request, CPD identified Jabateh with assistance from University of Chicago Police Department (UCPD) investigators.
Jabateh spoke about the October 21 arrest of an unnamed Arab student, “A.” According to UCUP, Student A. was placed on an involuntary leave of absence and removed from on-campus housing, with no plans for reinstatement.
“That is what the University of Chicago does. When a student is arrested, as they claim, by the Chicago Police Department, without being proven guilty, their response is to strip them of their communities, their source of income, and their education, while simultaneously investigating to further prosecute that student,” Jabateh said.
The second speaker was Stephanie Curry, a Woodlawn resident who was evicted from her apartment near the Barack Obama Presidential Center in September. She spoke on the University’s role in displacing Black students and residents on the South Side.
After a fire destroyed her apartment, Curry said she was moved to a unit in her building with smoke and water damage, mold, mice, and a hole in the ceiling that “sometimes leaks discolored water.” After multiple 311 calls to report the issues went unanswered, Curry withheld rent until building management took her to court and evicted her, the Sun-Times reported in September.
Uday Jain, a member of UChicago Faculty and Staff for Justice in Palestine and a postdoctoral teaching fellow in the Committee on Social Thought, was the event’s final speaker.
“This arrest and eviction of a queer Black undergraduate student continues a pattern of structural anti-blackness that the University of Chicago has perpetrated for decades,” Jain said.
The briefing concluded without the opportunity for news outlets to pose questions to UCUP or the three speakers.
Since October, UCUP has not responded to repeated requests for comment made by the Maroon through email and social media, and by phone.
When the Maroon asked for UCUP’s press contact at the briefing, the event moderator refused.
Following the briefing, the Maroon contacted UCUP by phone for comment. “We’re not talking to the Maroon,” a press contact said.
Previously, after UCUP rallied in front of Harper Memorial Library on October 29 to demand that University administrators reverse the eviction of “Student A.,” the Maroon reached out to the organization for comment. In response, UCUP indicated that it would no longer provide press releases or comment to the Maroon unless an article covering the arrest of a student at the October 11 protest was taken down.
Zachary Leiter contributed reporting.
J H Christ / Jan 9, 2025 at 5:07 am
This is so, so, soooo awesome…for a number of reasons.
The first is we will forever know that Mamayan Jabateh is a violent lunatic. Google never forgets!
We also know her life will forever be dominated by her upcoming/inevitable conviction (body cam footage is WONDERFUL) and corresponding incarceration.
We also know she will be sequestered from civil society by IDOC (Illinois Department of Corrections). This is a significant benefit.
We also know that the hard working tuition paying families, and the generous donors to The University, won’t have their dollars being invested into this woke lunatic meat sleeve any longer. Those resources can be reallocated to much better use (like military veteran students).
Mamayan Jabateh is toast.
I IMPLORE the admissions staff to work harder to weed out these woke lunatics.
The remaining historic DEI admits are still processing through The University, but they will taper off now and in the years ahead so we will have less of this ilk infecting The University. Thank you SCOTUS!!
Her 30 hours in jail will seem like nothing compared to the years she’ll be in the custody of the State of Illinois. She will not have to worry about her “community” as she will be with her kind in prison. Her “source of income” will also not be an issue, as she will earn 17 cents an hour cleaning floors and folding laundry, and her “education” will become books from the prison library along with life skills like “shank making” and “avoiding the shower” when a dominate “alpha female” is around.
God bless the brave men and woman in blue who protect us from deranged, terrorist-loving, woke, lunatic admissions mistakes like Mamayan Jabateh.