Harlem: Stories of Repression and Resistance Walk led by Asad Dandia

Thursday, October 9th 5:00 - 7:00pm

Please join us for a guided walk through Harlem to learn about the neighborhood’s role in the movement against systemic injustice, specifically, police violence.

Harlem: Stories of Repression and Resistance considers the history of repressive policing in the neighborhood and organizing in response. The walk will cover historical events from the 1930s to the present, visiting the sites of flashpoints such as: the 1935, 1943, 1957, and 1964 uprisings against and challenges to police brutality; the civil rights movement and the FBI’s Counterintelligence program (COINTELPRO) aimed at its suppression; Black Power bookstores that doubled as Black activism hubs in the 1960s and 1970s; Mayor Rudi Giuliani-era aggressive enforcement policies like stop-and-frisk, which were guided by the conservative Manhattan Institute’s ’broken windows theory’; and the surveillance of Muslims especially post- 9/11. As such, the walk will give a deeper appreciation of not just oppressive structures but also the role of this urban village in advancing a people’s self-determination and social solidarity. Afterwards, there will be an opportunity for attendees to speak informally with the guide and each other over Somali chai. Register here.

Harlem: Stories of Repression and Resistance is part of CSSD's yearlong program Countering the Carceral State, which explores interconnections between the crises of disciplinary enforcement central to American power at home and abroad. The walk is co-sponsored by the Columbia Oral History MA Program and co-presented as part of their Thursday Evening Event Series, which in 2025-2026 explores the relationships between place, memory, and oral history through a series of site-specific oral history events.

Asad Dandia is a Brooklyn-born public historian, lecturer, and tour guide. As an undergraduate, he founded a mutual aid organization to feed his community, which was infiltrated by an NYPD informant, pushing him to join an ACLU-led lawsuit challenging police surveillance of NYC's Muslim communities. The lawsuit resulted in successful policy change that brought civil rights protections for all New Yorkers. Currently, he operates New York Narratives, a walking tour project that advances new perspectives on the city by highlighting erased, underrepresented, and forgotten community stories. He also lectures at CUNY and is a tour guide at the Museum of the City of New York. He holds a master's degree in Islamic Studies from Columbia University.

Location Details:

We will meet at the mural “From Harlem with Love: a Mural for Yuri and Malcolm” on West 125th Street & Old Broadway, New York, NY 10027

Directions: The 1 train to 125th street and walk over to the mural

Location Link: https://maps.app.goo.gl/otubSsMLaUnuamiC6?g_st=ipc.

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