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Crimson opinion writer

Marcus B. Montague-Mfuni

Latest Content

Op Eds

To Those Who Aspire to Lead The Harvard Crimson

As Chair of the Diversity and Inclusivity Committee this past year, part of my work naturally centered on improving our historic lack of diversity. This issue hastily leads to investigating why there is an anti-Crimson stigma among communities of color on Harvard’s campus. In digging for the roots of anti-Crimson stigma, I found patterns in many of those regrettable moments I mentioned that inform some crucial recommendations I will make today.

Op Eds

Don’t Call What Israel is Doing Apartheid

Apartheid, to the people it has directly affected, refers to something quite distinct and I would like to give those events their own sanctified space in our language.

Op Eds

Mayor Janey, 'Ending Racism’ Requires a Look at Boston Public Schools

For a plan to have any chance at “ending” racism, it must reach out further than this strictly two-pronged approach. Another important system demanding attention is Boston Public Schools.

Op Eds

Post-Trump Clarity

For the sake of moving America forward and leaving toxic politics in the past, I am giving up on accepting the degradation of politics to a lowly sport. I implore you to do the same.

Op Eds

Why ‘Free Speech’ Is Dead On Campuses

I, and many others, will not stop using our own free speech to attempt to ensure that our humanity is never on the table again — honoring our ancestry demands that.

Op Eds

The Harvard Crimson Is A Black Space Now

I realize that many of my fellow Black peers have decided against joining The Crimson for reasons of their own. But I must urge them — you — all to give it another consideration.

African, American
Columns

We Will Overcome: The Part of Black People You Can’t Choke

To honor our brothers George and Ahmaud, our sister Breonna, and all that came before them, we cannot, as a black community, lose hope in the face of America’s seemingly permanent systemic racism.

Columns

Supporting Everything Black Is Stupid

The way we can prevent the need for painful revisions of our perfect and simple histories is to write them with a nuanced perspective in real-time.

African, American
Columns

Black Music Has Lost Some Soul … And It’s Beautiful

This wave of black music we are living through is one of the most beautiful expressions of black freedom that was fought for by the work of those that came before.

African, American
Columns

Nothing Matters Anymore.

I will spare you the obligatory calls to stay safe and healthy. I will, instead, urge us to love the things we always do.

African, American
Columns

Unpacking Our Definition of ‘Black’

There are as many ways to be black as there are black people.

Editorials

Dissent: We Shouldn’t Stop Listening — The Case for Prison Divestment

Arguing that the conditions in prison prisons do not reach the standard of degrading human life or harming the systematically disadvantaged is illogical and facetious.

African, American
Columns

Let’s Ignore White People

Instead of trying to get our culture through to people, if we truly invest ourselves in ourselves, people will want to get themselves through our cultures.

Columns

I’m Black But I Am Not A Minority

Fundamentally, there is something in the different ways that black Americans and Africans connect with each other that feels incompatible. The causes of that seem intangible.

Op Eds

It’s Time To Use Some Of That Black Power

Black America, we have enough social capital in this country to start using it. And use it effectively we must if we are to see the changes we desire take form.

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