From xxxxxx <[email protected]>
Subject ‘The Town Loved Him’: Palestinian Student Detained in Vermont Forged Deep Connections in Ihe Upper Valley
Date April 18, 2025 2:50 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
[[link removed]]

‘THE TOWN LOVED HIM’: PALESTINIAN STUDENT DETAINED IN VERMONT
FORGED DEEP CONNECTIONS IN IHE UPPER VALLEY  
[[link removed]]


 

Paul Heintz
April 16, 2025
[[link removed]]


*
[[link removed]]
*
[[link removed]]
*
*
[[link removed]]

_ He is widely known in the upper Connecticut River Valley of
Vermont, where he has been based since moving to the United States
more than a decade ago, as a spiritual man who grew up Muslim, a
practicing Buddhist, and whose closest friends are Jewish. _

Mohsen Madawi pictured on his land in West Fairlee, Vermont., Photo
curtesy: Michael Denmeade // Boston Globe

 

When federal officials led a handcuffed Mohsen Mahdawi
[[link removed]] out
of an office building in northern Vermont on Monday, he became the
latest international student whom the Trump administration had
apparently targeted for speaking out against Israel’s war in Gaza.

But those who know Mahdawi say it’s absurd to suggest he “engaged
in pro-terrorist, anti-Semitic, anti-American activity,” as the
president has said of protesters at Columbia University where he was a
student. Rather, they describe him as a peaceful 34-year-old
Palestinian who had a remarkable journey from a refugee camp in the
West Bank to a cabin in rural Vermont to an Ivy League institution in
New York City.

He is widely known in the upper Connecticut River Valley of Vermont
and New Hampshire, where he has been based since moving to the United
States more than a decade ago, as a spiritual man who grew up Muslim,
is a practicing Buddhist, and whose closest friends are Jewish.

Palestinian student Mohsen Madawi was arrested during a visit to the
immigration office in Colchester.

“He is such an advocate for peace. He is such an opponent of any
kind of violence,” said Rabbi Dov Taylor, who leads Chavurat Ki-tov,
a Jewish cultural and educational organization in Woodstock, Vt.
“His love just comes out in what he says.”

Simon Dennis, a carpenter and a former selectboard member in nearby
Hartford, described Mahdawi as “a person of great gracefulness and
dignity and gravitas” who is “destined to go forward and do great
things in the world.”

Mahdawi, who was set to graduate this spring, was being held Tuesday
in Vermont’s Northwest State Correctional Facility in St. Albans.

On Wednesday evening, some 200 supporters gathered in a windswept
field several hundred yards from the prison. They hoisted Palestinian
flags and signs calling for his release. An organizer, Jesse Lubin of
Burlington, encouraged the crowd “to be loud enough so that he might
be able to hear us” from inside the prison.

Crystal Cole of St. Albans told fellow protesters that she was there
to demonstrate that even residents of this rural county on the
Canadian border were outraged about Mahdawi’s detention.

“People up here in Franklin County know just as well as everyone
else across the state, across the country, and across the world that
free speech is a right, kidnapping is a wrong, and we refuse to stand
for it,” she said.

By all accounts, Mahdawi has assiduously accumulated friends in the
Upper Valley since moving from the West Bank in 2014. He’s done so
while working as a bank teller, joining faith events, speaking at
lectures and protests on the Middle East, and serving as a
jack-of-all-trades at Dan & Whit’s, a popular general store in
Norwich.

“Everyone loved him,” said Dan Fraser, a former owner and manager.
“The town loved him. The town knows him.”

Mahdawi has lived for years in Fraser’s home in Hartford. He
attended Lehigh University in Pennsylvania before transferring to
Columbia in 2021. He was expecting to enter graduate school there in
the fall for international affairs.

Mahdawi has been a permanent resident, or green card holder, since
2015, according to his attorneys, and appeared on track to attain
citizenship. He had been in hiding after a friend and fellow Columbia
student organizer, Mahmoud Khalil, was detained on March 8, according
to friends.

In recent weeks, he was summoned to a US Citizenship and Immigration
Services office in Colchester, purportedly to take a civics test, the
final step in the process. He feared the test was a ruse, friends
said, but he felt he had no choice but to show up.

“He knew this was a setup and was prepared for what was
happening,” said Michael Denmeade, a retired therapist who
befriended Mahdawi but has since moved to Missouri. “I think he also
trusted that he didn’t want to be on the run.”

Sure enough, Mahdawi was detained after appearing for the test Monday
and led by men in hoods into an unmarked vehicle.

Mahdawi’s support network sprang into action. Friends had previously
established a group chat, called “Just in case -Mohsen,” to
strategize, and some had accompanied him to the test. One, Christopher
Helali, quickly posted video of Mahdawi making peace signs with both
hands as he was taken away.

His lawyers had prepared in advance a habeas petition seeking his
immediate release and calling for the courts to keep him in Vermont.
Soon after it was filed, a federal judge, William K. Sessions III,
barred the government from whisking Mahdawi away to another
jurisdiction, as has happened recently in similar cases.

All three members of Vermont’s congressional delegation weighed in
to support him Monday, and the state’s Republican governor, Phil
Scott, followed suit Tuesday in a statement criticizing the shadowy
nature of Mahdawi’s detention.

Luna Droubi, one of Mahdawi’s attorneys, said his legal team had not
received “any information or basis for his detention,” but that it
appeared to be “based on defamatory statements by non-governmental
actors and opponents of Palestinian human rights.”

In a court filing Monday, the attorneys pointed to social media posts
[[link removed]] in which Betar
US, a militant Zionist organization, called for Mahdawi’s
deportation.

“Jihadi bastard got nailed during an immigration interview,” the
group wrote
[[link removed]] Monday
afternoon, employing emojis depicting tearful laughter. “We confirm
we provided info on him and many others.”

Liz Blum, a Norwich resident and cofounder of Jewish Voice for Peace
Vermont and New Hampshire, spoke alongside Mahdawi at protests in the
Upper Valley. She described accusations of antisemitism leveled at him
as “gaslighting,” saying he simply fought for equality.

Mahdawi was born and raised in Far’a, a Palestinian refugee camp in
the Israeli-occupied West Bank — part of the third generation of his
family to live there. In interviews, he has described sharing two
rooms with nearly a dozen relatives and said his brother died at 8
after Israeli forces prevented him from getting medical care. He’s
said he witnessed Israeli soldiers killing his best friend when he was
12 and said he was shot in the leg at 15.

“I saw the Israelis as the reason for my misery,” he told the
Valley News in a 2020 profile.

While studying at Birzeit University in the West Bank, he met an
American and followed her to the Upper Valley, where she was attending
the Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth. They married and later
divorced, but he remained in the area.

David Bisno, a retired eye surgeon, met Mahdawi when he was working as
a teller at Ledyard National Bank in Hanover, N.H.

“I was making a deposit and was just taken with him,” Bisno said.

When Mahdawi shared his story, Bisno invited him to speak to a class
he was teaching on the Middle East.

“He said, ‘I’ve never spoken to a group before in English, but
I’d be happy to try,’” Bisno recalled. “People were
spellbound. You could’ve heard a pin drop as he spoke to this group
of 100.”

Denmeade, the retired therapist, met Mahdawi at a Unitarian
Universalist service in Hartland and later invited him to live with
his family, saying that he had become “like a son.”

“He had a lot of night terrors,” Denmeade recalled. “He saw a
lot of horrible things as a young child.”

Over time, friends say, Mahdawi’s views evolved, and he came to draw
a distinction between Israeli soldiers in the West Bank and American
Jews he’d befriended here.

“Despite his family having suffered irrevocably from the Israeli
Defense Forces, he is as warm and compassionate and friendly with Jews
as with everybody else,” said Bismo, who is Jewish. “He wants to
try to find a path to peace for these two peoples.”

Friends say that’s why Mahdawi stepped back from the protests at
Columbia in March 2024 as they grew more heated.

“He was getting a lot of grief from Palestinians because he wants a
peaceful process for his people, and he knows you have to get the
Jewish people at the table as well,” Denmeade said. “It’s hard
to be hated by both sides — at least, the extremism on both
sides.”

In recent years, Mahdawi has been working on a 21-acre plot of land he
bought in rural West Fairlee. He’s built roads, dug a pond, and
constructed a small cabin. Friends say this is the most cherished
place in Mahdawi’s world — and where he sees his future.

“His dream is to establish a retreat center there where Palestinian
and Israeli kids can come and meet each other and get to know one
another and listen to each other and become a force for peace,” said
Taylor, the rabbi from Woodstock. “That’s who he is.”

_Giulia McDonnell Nieto del Rio of the Globe staff contributed to this
report._

* Mohsen Madawi
[[link removed]]
* Palestinian students
[[link removed]]
* ICE
[[link removed]]
* Palestine solidarity
[[link removed]]
* deportations
[[link removed]]
* Donald Trump
[[link removed]]
* Trump 2.0
[[link removed]]
* homeland security
[[link removed]]
* DHS
[[link removed]]
* Israel
[[link removed]]
* Palestine
[[link removed]]
* Israel-Gaza War
[[link removed]]
* Encampments
[[link removed]]
* Columbia student protests
[[link removed]]
* Student protests
[[link removed]]
* Protest
[[link removed]]
* Free Speech
[[link removed]]
* First Amendment
[[link removed]]
* foreign students
[[link removed]]
* Student visa
[[link removed]]
* Constitution
[[link removed]]
* Entrapment
[[link removed]]
* Vermont
[[link removed]]

*
[[link removed]]
*
[[link removed]]
*
*
[[link removed]]

 

 

 

INTERPRET THE WORLD AND CHANGE IT

 

 

Submit via web
[[link removed]]

Submit via email
Frequently asked questions
[[link removed]]
Manage subscription
[[link removed]]
Visit xxxxxx.org
[[link removed]]

Twitter [[link removed]]

Facebook [[link removed]]

 




[link removed]

To unsubscribe, click the following link:
[link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis