Talking in the Library with Jewher Ilham

ThuNov14
University Library Mary Tefft White Cultural CenterOpen to the Public

Jewher Ilham is an author, a rights activist, and the daughter of Uyghur scholar, an internationally renowned moderate voice dedicated to bridging the gap between the Uyghur people and the Han Chinese.  In 2014, Ilham Tohti was given the unprecedented sentence of life in prison on charges of separatism, a manufactured allegation understood by the international community as retribution for his writings promoting peace between the two groups.

As an advocate for her imprisoned father, and in response to Chinas systematic repression of Uyghurs, Jewher has testified before the U.S. Congressional Executive Committee on China and the UN General Assembly, lobbied government officials in the European Union, and met with multiple US politicians including the President of the United States and three Secretaries of State.

In addition to writing in the New York Times, Teen Vogue, The Economist, CNN, and The Guardian, she has published two memoirs: ," and "." She currently works at the Worker Rights Consortium as Project to Combat Forced Labor Coordinator, and is a co-producer and a key protagonist of the award-winning documentary film about the Uyghurs.