logo
‘A beautiful prison': Mohsen Mahdawi seeks solace in rural Vermont as he fends off deportation

‘A beautiful prison': Mohsen Mahdawi seeks solace in rural Vermont as he fends off deportation

Boston Globe09-05-2025

'It's amazing,' he said of the view, grinning.
Advertisement
A Columbia University student who grew up in the occupied West Bank, the 34-year-old Mahdawi
US citizen.
After 16 days in prison, Mahdawi was freed by a federal judge in Vermont who
Advertisement
Mahdawi's freedom may be fleeting. The Trump administration, which has called him a threat to national security, continues to seek his detention and, more than likely, deportation. The judge has limited his movements to Vermont and New York.
'What it reminds me of is Palestine, where I was supposed to be in one area and, if I crossed to the other, I don't have rights,' he said. 'But I am grateful that I have this nature. I mean, it's a larger prison, but it's a beautiful prison to be in.'
Mahdawi carries himself with confidence and engages others with an intense and absorbing gaze. His expression conveys high spirits, in spite of the turmoil he's faced.
But when the prospect of deportation comes up, his ever-present smile fades away. 'It would be similar to a death sentence,' he said.
Family members in the West Bank have been targeted by Israelis since Mahdawi became a leader of Columbia's pro-Palestinian movement, he said. Were he to return, he believes, Israeli soldiers or settlers would seek revenge.
Mahdawi, though, says there's something he fears even more than death: not being able to continue the peacemaking efforts he's been building in the United States. He sees himself as 'a baby diplomat' who is uniquely poised to bring together Palestinians, Israelis, and Americans to resolve the ancient conflict in the Middle East. He's even written a 68-page peace plan.
'I am going to school in order to make peace — peace and justice,' said Mahdawi, who is slated to begin graduate studies at Columbia's School of International and Public Affairs in September. 'And if they deport me, they are killing this possibility, this opportunity that I am seeing.'
Advertisement
Mahdawi bought the West Fairlee property for $51,000 off Facebook Marketplace in October 2020 as a pandemic project of sorts. Clearing trees, digging ponds, and building the cabin also served as a form of therapy, he said, to work through the trauma of a youth spent in violence and hardship within the Far'a refugee camp.
'I said in my head, 'If I die tomorrow, what is the one thing I would want to have in my life?' And it was something that none of my parents had … [for] three generations, which is a piece of land,' he said.
Mahdawi named his sanctuary Jannah Ndakinna. Jannah means 'paradise' in his native Arabic, he said, and Ndakinna means 'homeland' in the Indigenous Abenaki language. 'So it's a paradise, in my eyes, but it's a homeland — the homeland for all the Abenaki people who used to be here before,' he said. 'I am just a caretaker.'
The cabin is not fancy. It is just 8-by-16 feet, not much bigger than his recently vacated jail cell, he joked. It gives off the vibe of a tiny home crossed with a man-cave. But the view of the verdant countryside from its deck is majestic.
'Isn't it magical?' he said. 'The cabin has helped me, really, to realize that, in order to find joy, you don't need much.'
That joy has been sharply tempered by President Trump's campaign to root out protesters of Israel's deadly war in Gaza. Betar US,
Advertisement
Mahdawi laid low for 23 days, he said, with only three people knowing where he was. He paced constantly, and, as a practicing Buddhist, meditated. When immigration officials notified him his long-awaited citizenship interview would take place April 14 in Vermont, he suspected a trap.
After consulting with friends and attorneys and making a list of pros and cons, he decided to show up for the interview.
'I'd rather be detained in Vermont,' he reasoned. 'That's the main pro. If I get detained in Vermont, I have a better chance.'
As soon as he completed the test, the person administering it opened a door, Mahdawi said, 'and the officers stormed in — you know, masks covering their faces, hats. … They said, 'You're under arrest.''
When the officers led him away in handcuffs, Mahdawi said, he carefully considered how the moment might be captured by
Mahdawi had two goals, he said: to reassure worried loved ones he'd be OK and to avoid projecting fear.
'I wanted to tell people that if you are fighting for something that you believe in, you should not surrender to intimidation or fear: I am not afraid,' he said. 'This is the message I wanted to send: no intimidation.'
The officers told Mahdawi they planned to ship him to Louisiana, where other deportation targets have faced a more conservative court system. But the entourage missed its flight by minutes, he said, giving his lawyers time to get a court order keeping him in Vermont.
Advertisement
'I looked at [the officers] and I said, 'Congratulations! You're gonna be enjoying the Burlington-Lake Champlain area now, instead of traveling on an airplane,'' he recalled.
Mahdawi, however, ended up in
'You lose your basic rights,' he said.
A few days into his stay, he was joined by a group of migrant farmworkers
'He doesn't speak English, but he says to me, 'Good.' And they call him 'amigo,'' said Mahdawi, who doesn't speak Spanish. 'So, 'amigo' and 'good.' That's what we shared.'
As a key court hearing approached, Mahdawi tried to temper his eternal optimism — what he called his 'strongest muscle.' But the night before he had a dream of his favorite Palestinian dish, mansaf, which he said was a signal he would soon be released. He packed his meager prison belongings and headed to court.
After the judge ordered his release, Mahdawi again sought to use his public platform to speak out against what he described as the administration's campaign of intimidation. In impromptu remarks outside the Burlington courthouse, he declared, 'I am saying it clear and loud to President Trump and his Cabinet: I am not afraid of you.'
His release, however brief it may prove, 'is a major, major signal that the justice system is working,' Mahdawi said.
Advertisement
On Thursday,
After hiking down from the ridgeline, Mahdawi paused at two ponds he had excavated and named 'Harmony' and 'Melody.' Picking up several stones, he tried, with mixed success, to skip them across the water.
'America is the first place I learned how to do that. We didn't have bodies of water,' he said of the refugee camp in which he was raised. 'Most Palestinians won't experience this, this or the sea.'
He tossed another rock across the pond.
'This is what we're doing here: You throw a stone, it hits a spot, but the ripple gets through the whole water,' he said. 'My release … it's a rippling going around. A lot of people are feeling more hope nowadays."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Laura Loomer meets with Vice President JD Vance at White House complex, sources say
Laura Loomer meets with Vice President JD Vance at White House complex, sources say

CNN

time9 minutes ago

  • CNN

Laura Loomer meets with Vice President JD Vance at White House complex, sources say

Laura Loomer, the far-right activist who once posted a video claiming 9/11 was an 'inside job,' was back at the White House complex Tuesday morning, where she met privately with Vice President JD Vance, three sources familiar with the meeting tell CNN. The sources would not share the substance of the one-on-one closed-door meeting, which occurred in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, or what was discussed. Loomer did not meet with President Donald Trump and has since departed the White House complex, one of the sources said. After Loomer's last known visit to the White House in April, the White House fired several National Security Council staffers whom she labeled as disloyal. The administration also fired the director and deputy director of the National Security Agency. Loomer, who has a loyal online following, has been an influential figure in the Trump administration. She has a direct line to the president and has been known to influence personnel decisions, though she has not been able to secure a White House press credential. 'I do think there's a fear that I may ask questions about the loyalties of people in the White House,' she told CNN recently, 'and they fear me having a national and global microphone to ask those questions.' Loomer had publicly criticized then-national security adviser Michael Waltz before he was ousted from his position, accusing the former Florida congressman of making poor personnel choices. She weighed in more recently on the administration's move to withdraw Jared Isaacman as its nominee to be the next NASA administrator, touting Isaacman's professional accomplishments and questioning why the White House would not move forward on him. During the 2024 campaign, Trump's travels with Loomer on September 11 were illustrative of her influence with the then-candidate. But her proximity to Trump sparked some friction in part because she had previously posted a video claiming that the attack on the World Trade Center towers was an 'inside job.' Loomer told CNN at the time, 'I've never denied the fact that Islamic terrorists carried out the 9/11 terrorist attacks. In fact, the media calls me anti Muslim precisely for the reason that I spend so much time focusing on talking about the threats of Islamic terrorism in America.'

Trump slams GOP Sen. Rand Paul for opposing 'big, beautiful bill' due to $5 trillion debt ceiling hike
Trump slams GOP Sen. Rand Paul for opposing 'big, beautiful bill' due to $5 trillion debt ceiling hike

CNBC

time10 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Trump slams GOP Sen. Rand Paul for opposing 'big, beautiful bill' due to $5 trillion debt ceiling hike

President Donald Trump on Tuesday blasted Sen. Rand Paul after the Kentucky Republican criticized the massive Trump-backed budget bill over its provision to raise the debt ceiling by trillions of dollars. Paul, a staunch libertarian, said on CNBC's "Squawk Box" that he is "just not open to supporting $5 trillion ... in debt ceiling increase" that the Senate's version of the bill currently includes. Trump lashed out soon after, writing on Truth Social that the senator "has very little understanding" of the budget plan that the president has dubbed the "one big, beautiful bill." Trump claimed Paul does not grasp that the bill, which includes a slew of tax and spending cuts but is projected to significantly widen national deficits, will spur "tremendous GROWTH." "He loves voting 'NO' on everything, he thinks it's good politics, but it's not," Trump said of the senator. In a follow-up post, Trump attacked Paul in more personal terms. He "never has any practical or constructive ideas," Trump wrote, adding, "His ideas are actually crazy (losers!). The people of Kentucky can't stand him. This is a BIG GROWTH BILL!" A spokesperson for Paul's Senate office did not immediately reply to a request for comment on Trump's posts. The president's heated reaction is part of a broader pressure campaign to convince Republican holdouts to vote for the massive bill, the centerpiece of Trump's domestic policy agenda. The budget package narrowly passed by the House last month would extend Trump's 2017 tax cuts, and add new exemptions on workers' tips and overtime, seniors' Social Security and more. It would also impose work requirements for the government-run health insurance program Medicaid, and it would reform the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, known as SNAP, that millions of low-income Americans rely upon. The version of the bill that passed the House in late May would also increase the U.S. debt limit by $4 trillion. The version currently pending in the Senate would hike the debt ceiling even more, $5 trillion total. The debt ceiling increase is "the main thing that I object to," Paul said Tuesday on CNBC. Setting the ceiling at $5 trillion is "an indication that we'll borrow that much," he said. "It's an indication that will put the debt on the back burner." "I do want the tax cuts. I want them to be permanent. I'm throwing a lot of spending cuts, but I'll compromise and get as much as I can," he said. "I'm just not going to take responsibility for the debt," said Paul. The bill is moving through Congress via the reconciliation process, which would enable to the 53-47 Republican Senate majority to bypass the traditional 60-vote threshold and approve the bill without any Democratic support. But that also means that Republicans can only afford to lose three votes in the chamber. Paul said Sunday that he believes there are currently four Republicans opposed to the package as it stands. But if the debt ceiling hike were cut from the bill, Paul said, then he would vote for it. "I would be very surprised if the bill, at least, is not modified in a good direction," he told CBS' "Face the Nation."

Trump's approval among Latino voters is crashing, new poll shows
Trump's approval among Latino voters is crashing, new poll shows

Politico

time15 minutes ago

  • Politico

Trump's approval among Latino voters is crashing, new poll shows

Supporters hold a sign before campaign event for Donald Trump on Sept.12, 2024, in Tucson, Ariz. | Alex Brandon, File/AP After Latino voters moved toward President Donald Trump in November, a new in-depth survey of this demographic shows their support for him could be breaking, according to polling shared first with POLITICO. Throughout the president's first few months in office, his favorability among Latinos is crashing, especially among independents and women, according to a new poll conducted by Global Strategy Group and commissioned by Somos Votantes, a Democratic-leaning group that focuses on Latinos. Among independents, Trump's approval dropped from 43 percent in February to 29 percent in May. Overall, his approval among Latinos dropped from 43 percent to 39 percent. The poll surveyed 800 Hispanic/Latino registered voters nationwide between May 8 and May 18 and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percent. The Latinos surveyed were also increasingly negative on Trump's handling of the economy, with just 38 percent of those surveyed holding a positive view. Among independents, that figure drops to 26 percent, and among women it's at 30 percent. 'These numbers tell a pretty clear story that (Trump's economic) trust is not only steadily, but quickly, eroding, which is a huge liability for the president,' said Somos Votantes president Melissa Morales, who said Trump's gains among Latinos were mostly because of his promises to create a better economy. Fifty-six percent of those surveyed said that the economy is getting worse under Trump's administration, and 19 percent said the economy is improving. 'I think there are a lot of Latinos who didn't necessarily vote for Donald Trump. They voted for change,' Morales said. 'They voted for something different than they were experiencing in their everyday economic lives.' Republicans have continued to bet that Hispanic and Latino voters will continue to back them in the midterms following Trump's inroads. On Monday, the National Republican Congressional Committee launched a Spanish ad campaign targeting eight House Democrats, which doubled down on their promise to target 11 seats occupied by Democrats across the Southwest. Republicans point to Trump's progress with this voting bloc, as well as specific gains in a few majority-Hispanic House districts. When Republicans announced their targets, Rep. Richard Hudson (R-N.C.) — who chairs the NRCC — made a direct plea to Hispanic voters during a cable appearance. 'Hispanic voters. We want your vote,' Hudson said at the time. 'We share your values. Our policies will make your lives better.' Somos Votantes said that messaging isn't landing so far. 'There is a huge disconnect between what Hispanic/Latino voters want the President and Congress to focus on versus what they believe Trump and Republicans are doing,' said a memo shared alongside the polling.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store