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Human Ripples of the Harvard Standoff

| Dalia Parete |

Initium Media captured the human drama behind a geopolitical crisis when the Trump administration stripped Harvard’s 7,000 international students of their legal status on May 22, interviewing Chinese and Taiwanese students caught in an unprecedented 21-hour standoff.

The Singapore-based outlet documented how students coped with sudden uncertainty through dark humor and solidarity. Patrick (帕特里克), a Chinese architecture student, walked out of the US consulate in Wuhan with a visa refusal after the officer asked, “Didn’t you see the news?” Andy (安迪), a Kennedy School graduate, defiantly posted before flying to Boston: “Harvard won’t kneel — we’ll die standing up.”

Taped to a pole at Harvard University, “Resist F-Elon Trump at Harvard University.” SOURCE: Wikimedia Commons.

Initium‘s reporting revealed the policy’s sweeping impact beyond enrollment. Students on work permits faced immediate job loss, while those abroad scrambled to return within 72 hours. In group chats, students shared gallows humor: “I will be reborn as an MIT student.”

The crisis began when Harvard refused Trump administration demands to audit students’ political ideologies and provide records of protest participants. Unlike Columbia University, which capitulated to preserve 400 million dollars in federal funding, Harvard sued the government — becoming the first university to mount such resistance.

Twenty-one hours after the suspension, a federal judge restored Harvard’s international student program through a temporary restraining order. Students celebrated, but the episode left many reconsidering their American dreams and questioning whether their education investment remained worthwhile amid escalating political hostility.

“Pretty exciting, haha, don’t you think it’s pretty exciting?” one student told Initium.


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