‘I feel so completely unsafe’: Black BYU student followed around on campus by peer and faculty


A Brigham Young University student member of the Black Menaces, an activism group on campus, says he was followed around by a student and faculty member while recording videos for the group.

Sebastian Stewart-Johnson, a senior at Brigham Young University in Provo, UT, has garnered a TikTok following by interviewing his peers as about social justice issues and posting footage of the interviews online. He is also the executive director of the Black Menaces, an activism non-profit focused on empowering marginalized communities. In recent TikTok videos, Stewart-Johnson says that he was followed and harassed by another BYU student, who has been identified as Jacob Christensen.

“You guys are the worst piece of journalism I’ve ever seen,” Christensen is seen telling Stewart-Johnson in a video.

On Tuesday, Stewart-Johnson’s initial video about Christensen had over a million views on TikTok.

@realsebastiansj this was just the beginning. he kept following me for a lot more time #byu #utah #blackmenaces ♬ original sound – sebastian sj (black menace)

Stewart-Johnson says in a TikTok that Christensen made him very uncomfortable and followed him around campus despite Stewart-Johnson asking him to stop. Christensen is also seen blocking the person recording Stewart-Johnson as he interviews students.

A statement posted on Instagram by The Cougar Chronicle, a conservative news outlet that covers BYU of which Christensen is the Editor in Chief, reveals that a faculty member “encouraged” Christensen to interrupt Stewart-Johnson’s videos, as the outlet believes that the Black Menaces engage in “deceptive tactics” to “humiliate and exploit BYU students on their social media” accounts. The Cougar Chronicle is not officially affiliated with BYU, as is described in the publication’s Instagram bio.

Stewart-Johnson identified the faculty member as Karen Strange, who works in BYU’s McKay School of Education—though her faculty page is no longer available on BYU’s website—and says that Strange called the cops on him, which the Cougar Chronicle confirms. In a statement to the Salt Lake Tribune on the situation, BYU did not confirm that Strange was still employed by the school.

BYU’s mission statement on race, equity, and belonging states that “rooting out racism, healing its wounds, and building bridges of understanding is the responsibility of every member of the BYU community.” BYU hopes that its student body and staff will listen to its “beloved Black BYU community to understand how racism has frustrated, and continues to frustrate their experiences at BYU.” Stewart-Johnson says that Strange’s behavior is counter to the school’s statement.

“I don’t understand how BYU faculty and admin want to suppress Black Menaces and my TikTok so bad,” Stewart-Johnson says. “Because it doesn’t fit their agenda [on race].”

Since his interactions with Christensen, Stewart-Johnson says that his mental health has struggled and that he wishes he didn’t have to return to campus.

“I feel so completely unsafe and uncomfortable at BYU,” Stewart-Johnson says in a recent TikTok. “I don’t trust BYU faculty members.”

The Salt Lake Tribune reported that BYU’s Office of Belonging invited Stewart-Johnson to “talk with them about his concerns,” in a statement by University spokesperson Carri Jenkins.

The Daily Dot has reached out to Stewart-Johnson, BYU, and the Cougar Chronicle.

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Source: https://www.dailydot.com/irl/byu-student-followed/