The recent Upstander Walk brought together students, faculty, and staff to promote diversity, equity, inclusion, access, and belonging, while condemning injustice of all kinds.
April 24, 2023
By Renee Chmiel, Office of Marketing and Communications
Chargers walk in unity during the Upstander Walk.
Throughout her time as a Charger, Mary Lippa â23 has been committed to fostering unity and respect. She was recently part of a University-wide initiative that brought Chargers together to walk in solidarity with each other and to reinforce the Universityâs values.
A member of the Universityâs Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (JEDI) student ambassadors program, Lippa discussed the importance of showing respect and support for members of the LGBTQ+ community. She described the challenges that members of the LGBTQ+ community face, and she emphasized the importance of promoting safety and inclusivity â from using correct pronouns to supporting access to gender-affirming care.
âTo promote inclusivity and safe spaces, we must examine where we fall flat,â she said. âËÄÉ«AV can and does create a culture that is knowledgeable. I encourage everyone not to be bystanders. Help members of the LGBTQ+ community find safety and elevate their voices. And to members of the LGBTQ+ community: You are loved at the University.â
Mary Lippa â23 speaks to her fellow Chargers during the event.
âMake the world a better placeâ
The Upstander Walk was an opportunity for Chargers to walk in unity as a symbol of community solidarity against all injustices â including those pertaining to social, racial, and economic factors. Before the walk began, Ashley Dunn, assistant dean of student support, explained the importance of being an âupstanderâ â one who speaks up and intervenes if an individual is bullied or attacked â versus a âbystander,â who does not get involved.
âWe must be willing to stand up and speak up, to amplify othersâ voices,â she said. âWe must make a commitment to choose action when others are in need. As a community and as an institution of higher education, we must choose advocacy and action.â
The event brought together dozens of Chargers â students, faculty, and staff â who united to show their support. The group included Sheahon Zenger, Ph.D., interim president, who reflected on the value of words such as âallyâ and âbelonging,â as well as the importance of coming together as a community.
âI look out today at people I consider to be friends, and it takes a friend to be a friend,â said Dr. Zenger, who, in addition to celebrating unity and community, was also celebrating a birthday. âWhat if we just treated everyone as a friend? Weâd be a friend and weâd help. Letâs embrace love and friendship. Wouldnât that make the world a better place? Isnât that what this event is about?â
The event brought participants to the Charger statue.
âIt is about actionâ
Starting in the Maxcy Quad, the walk brought Chargers around the central part of campus, stopping in front of Anemone and Steven Kaplan Hall, the Charger statue, and at a gazebo near Sheffield Hall, before ending at the Myatt Center.
Timothy Prince, coordinator for leadership in the Myatt Center who planned the event, was encouraged by how many Chargers took part in the walk. He hopes this event will continue to strengthen the foundation for inclusivity at the University.
âI hope everyone learned that âupstanderâ isnât about doing just one thing, and that it is about action,â he said. âWe are all different in beautiful ways, and I hope we can celebrate that rather than letting it divide us.â
Faculty, staff, and students came together to condemn all kinds of injustice.