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BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:ai1ec-2046@privacycalendar.org
DTSTAMP:20210605T195426Z
CATEGORIES;LANGUAGE=en-US:In-person event streamed online
CONTACT:Georgetown Law\; https://www.law.georgetown.edu/privacy-technology-
 center/events/color-of-surveillance-2017/
DESCRIPTION:Across our country’s history – from the surveillance of the Sep
 aratists we now know as Pilgrims in 16th and 17th century England\, to fed
 eral house raids and interrogations of early Mormons in the Utah Territory
  in the 19th century\, to the 20thcentury surveillance of Jewish\, Muslim\
 , Quaker\, and Sikh communities\, to modern post-9/11 surveillance systems
  –government monitoring has long had a deep and disparate impact on Americ
 an religious minorities.\nThe Color of Surveillance: Government Monitoring
  of American Religious Minorities will trace that history\, and ask hard q
 uestions about what it means: Is modern surveillance consistent with the i
 ntentions of the American founders – or\, for that matter\, the events tha
 t precipitated the migration of English Separatists to the New World on th
 e Mayflower? Do modern counterterrorism initiatives appropriately protect 
 civil rights and civil liberties? How are local communities\, advocates\, 
 and artists responding to these challenges?\nNow in its third year\, The C
 olor of Surveillance\, organized by the Center on Privacy & Technology at 
 Georgetown Law\, convenes academic\, policy and government experts alongsi
 de local and community activists and artists. Prior speakers have included
  the Pulitzer-winning biographers of Martin Luther King\, Jr. and W.E.B. D
 uBois\, Guggenheim award-winning artists\, and the general counsel of the 
 Federal Bureau of Investigation.\n\nWelcome & Introduction to The Color of
  Surveillance: Government Monitoring of Religious Minorities\n8:45 – 9:00a
 m\nDean William Treanor\, Georgetown Law\nAlvaro Bedoya\, Center on Privac
 y & Technology at Georgetown Law\n\nElizabeth I to the Early 20th Century
 \n9:00 – 10:15am\n“Hunted”: 16th & 17th Century Surveillance of Pilgrims\n
 John Coffey\, University of Leicester\nIs the United States a Christian Na
 tion?\nBrooke Allen\, Bennington College\n“Mohammedan Barbarism”: The Camp
 aign Against Early Mormons\nJ. Spencer Fluhman\, Brigham Young University
 \nThe Military Intelligence Division and American Jews\nAlvaro Bedoya\, Ce
 nter on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law\nThe FBI and the Moorish Sc
 ience Temple of America\nSylvester A. Johnson\, Virginia Tech\n\nBREAK\n10
 :15 – 10:30am\n\n\nThe 1960s to the Aftermath of 9/11\n10:30 – 12:05pm\nJ.
  Edgar Hoover\, Black Clergy\, and Martin Luther King\, Jr.\nLerone A. Mar
 tin\, PhD\, Danforth Center on Religion and Politics at Washington Univers
 ity in St. Louis\nThe Feeling of Being Watched: A Filmmaker’s Response\nAs
 sia Boundaoui\, The Inverse Surveillance Project\nRabia Boundaoui\nXiangno
 ng (George) Wang (moderator)\, Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetow
 n Law\nPost-9/11 Watchlists\nHina Shamsi\, ACLU National Security Project
 \nCommunity Reflections\nMembers of the Center for Media Justice’s Nationa
 l Delegation of MASA Community Activists\n\n\nLUNCH BREAK\n12:05 – 1:00pm
 \n\n\nLife in Affected Communities\n1:00 – 2:45pm\nA Conversation on Count
 ering Violent Extremism\nFaiza Patel\, Brennan Center for Justice\nAyaan D
 ahir\, Young Muslim Collective\nEric Rosand\, The Prevention Project\nWill
 iam Braniff\, START\, University of Maryland\nAlvaro Bedoya (moderator)\, 
 Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law\n“Mosque Crawlers” and th
 e Raza and Hassan cases\nAsad Dandia\, NYU Graduate Student\nFarhaj Hassan
 \, Muslims United For Justice\nLaura Moy (moderator)\, Center on Privacy &
  Technology at Georgetown Law\n“If they should come for us”: A Poet’s Resp
 onse\nFatimah Asghar\nRenata Barreto (moderator)\, Center on Privacy & Tec
 hnology at Georgetown Law\n\nBREAK\n2:45 – 3:00pm\n\n\nCommunity Action\n3
 :00 – 5:25pm\nOrganizing after Raza\nFahd Ahmed\, DRUM – Desis Rising Up &
  Moving\nStopping the Digital Muslim Ban: A Case Study\nRachel Levinson-Wa
 ldman\, Brennan Center for Justice\nNatasha Duarte\, Center for Democracy 
 & Technology\nYolanda C. Rondon\, American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Commit
 tee\nSteven Renderos\, Center for Media Justice\nHarrison Rudolph (moderat
 or)\, Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law\nOrganizing in Sili
 con Valley\nMaya Berry\, Arab American Institute\nMichelle Miller\, Cowork
 er.org\nJameson Spivack (moderator)\, Center on Privacy & Technology at Ge
 orgetown Law\nOrganizing Locally\nBrian Hofer\, Oakland Privacy\nReligious
  Surveillance and Intersectionality\nBrandi Collins-Dexter\, Color Of Chan
 ge\n“Stealth Wear”: An Artist’s Response\nAdam Harvey\n\nClosing Remarks\n
 5:25 – 5:30pm\nReception to follow in Hart lobby\n\n\nSpeakers:\n\nFahd Ah
 med of Desis Rising Up and Moving\, a grassroots organizer on the issues o
 f racial profiling\, immigrant justice\, and police accountability\nProfes
 sor Brooke Allen of Bennington College\, author of Moral Minority: Our Ske
 ptical Founding Fathers\, a New York Times notable book\nPoet Fatimah Asgh
 ar\, author of If They Come For Us & co-creator of the Emmy-nominated web 
 series Brown Girls\nWilliam Braniff of the National Consortium for the Stu
 dy of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START)\, studies CVE and alter
 native counterterrorism approaches\nFilmmaker Assia Boundaoui\, director o
 f The Feeling of Being Watched\, a “riveting” account (New York Times) of 
 surveillance of a suburban Muslim community in the 1990s\nProfessor John C
 offey of the University of Leicester\, a scholar of Tudor and Stuart-era s
 urveillance of the Puritans we now know as Pilgrims\nBrandi Collins-Dexter
  of Color Of Change\, a civil rights advocate on media\, environmental jus
 tice\, and economic issues\nAyaan Dahir of the Minneapolis Young Muslims C
 ollective\, a Somali American youth leader and civil liberties advocate\nA
 sad Dandia\, M.A. candidate in Middle Eastern Studies at New York Universi
 ty and plaintiff in the Raza v. NYPD case\nNatasha Duarte of the Center fo
 r Democracy & Technology\, author of Mixed Messages: The Limits of Automat
 ed Social Media Analysis\nProfessor Spencer Fluhman of Brigham Young Unive
 rsity\, author of “An ‘American Mahomet’: Joseph Smith\, Mohammad\, and th
 e Problem of Prophets in Antebellum America”\nArtist Adam Harvey\, creator
  of Stealth Wear\, a clothing collection “inspired by traditional Islamic 
 dress… reimagined in the context of drone warfare”\nSyed Farhaj Hassan\, a
  Sergeant in the U.S. Army Reserve and lead plaintiff in the Hassan v. Cit
 y of New York case\nBrian Hofer of Oakland Privacy and the Privacy Advisor
 y Commission of the City of Oakland\, an advocate for local anti-surveilla
 nce legislation\nProfessor Sylvester Johnson of Virginia Tech’s Center for
  the Humanities\, co-editor of The FBI and Religion: Faith and National Se
 curity before and after 9/11\nRachel Levinson-Waldman of the Brennan Cente
 r for Justice\, co-coordinator of the Immigrant Surveillance Working Group
 \nProfessor Lerone Martin of the John C. Danforth Center on Religion and P
 olitics\, a scholar on the FBI’s mobilization of African American clergy t
 o discredit Dr. Martin Luther King\, Jr.\nMichelle Miller of coworker.org\
 , leading facilitator of tech sector employee activism and mobilization\nF
 aiza Patel of the Brennan Center for Justice\, author of an in-depth criti
 que of federal CVE programs\nSteven Renderos of the Center for Media Justi
 ce\, co-organizer of a grassroots petition to IBM opposing the company’s i
 nterest in ICE’s “Digital Muslim Ban”\nYolanda Rondon of the American-Arab
  Anti-Discrimination Committee\, a civil rights attorney critical of DHS s
 urveillance initiatives\nEric Rosand of the Prevention Project: Organizing
  Against Violent Extremism\, a non-resident Senior Fellow at Brookings\, a
 nd a former State Department senior CVE official\nHina Shamsi of the Ameri
 can Civil Liberties Union\, which is challenging watchlists as unfair and 
 discriminatory\n\nTickets: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/color-of-surveilla
 nce-government-monitoring-of-religious-minorities-tickets-44923937707?mc_e
 id=d57dc607c8&mc_cid=dc8261e2cf.
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20180719T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20180719T171500
GEO:+38.897891;-77.012792
LOCATION:Georgetown University Law Center @ 600 New Jersey Ave NW\, Washing
 ton\, DC 20001\, USA
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:The Color of Surveillance: Government Monitoring of Religious Minor
 ities
URL:https://privacycalendar.org/event/color-surveillance-government-monitor
 ing-religious-minorities/
X-COST-TYPE:external
X-WP-IMAGES-URL:thumbnail\;https://privacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2
 018/07/Color-of-Surveillance-150x150.jpg\;150\;150\;1\,medium\;https://pri
 vacycalendar.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Color-of-Surveillance-300x150.
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X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC '-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//E
 N'>\\n<HTML>\\n<HEAD>\\n<TITLE></TITLE>\\n</HEAD>\\n<BODY><div class='ai1e
 c-event-avatar alignleft timely'><img src='https://privacycalendar.org/wp-
 content/uploads/2018/07/Color-of-Surveillance-300x150.jpg' width='300' hei
 ght='150' /></div><p>Across our country’s history – from the surveillance 
 of the Separatists we now know as Pilgrims in 16th and 17th century Englan
 d\, to federal house raids and interrogations of early Mormons in the Utah
  Territory in the 19th century\, to the 20thcentury surveillance of Jewish
 \, Muslim\, Quaker\, and Sikh communities\, to modern post-9/11 surveillan
 ce systems –government monitoring has long had a deep and disparate impact
  on American religious minorities.</p>\n<p><em>The Color of Surveillance: 
 Government Monitoring of American Religious Minorities</em> will trace tha
 t history\, and ask hard questions about what it means: Is modern surveill
 ance consistent with the intentions of the American founders – or\, for th
 at matter\, the events that precipitated the migration of English Separati
 sts to the New World on the Mayflower? Do modern counterterrorism initiati
 ves appropriately protect civil rights and civil liberties? How are local 
 communities\, advocates\, and artists responding to these challenges?</p>
 \n<p>Now in its third year\, <em>The Color of Surveillance</em>\, organize
 d by the Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law\, convenes acade
 mic\, policy and government experts alongside local and community activist
 s and artists. Prior speakers have included the Pulitzer-winning biographe
 rs of Martin Luther King\, Jr. and W.E.B. DuBois\, Guggenheim award-winnin
 g artists\, and the general counsel of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
 .</p>\n<hr />\n<p><strong>Welcome & Introduction to <i>The Color of Survei
 llance: Government Monitoring of Religious Minorities<br />\n</i>8:45 – 9:
 00am</strong></p>\n<p>Dean William Treanor\, Georgetown Law<br />\nAlvaro 
 Bedoya\, Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law</p>\n<hr />\n<p>
 <strong>Elizabeth I to the Early 20th Century<br />\n9:00 – 10:15am</stron
 g></p>\n<p><strong>“Hunted”: 16th & 17th Century Surveillance of Pilgrims<
 /strong><br />\nJohn Coffey\, University of Leicester</p>\n<p><strong>Is t
 he United States a Christian Nation?</strong><br />\nBrooke Allen\, Bennin
 gton College</p>\n<p><strong>“Mohammedan Barbarism”: The Campaign Against 
 Early Mormons</strong><br />\nJ. Spencer Fluhman\, Brigham Young Universit
 y</p>\n<p><strong>The Military Intelligence Division and American Jews</st
 rong><br />\nAlvaro Bedoya\, Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown 
 Law</p>\n<p><strong>The FBI and the Moorish Science Temple of America</str
 ong><br />\nSylvester A. Johnson\, Virginia Tech</p>\n<hr />\n<p><strong>B
 REAK<br />\n10:15 – 10:30am</p>\n<p></strong></p>\n<hr />\n<p><strong>The 
 1960s to the Aftermath of 9/11<br />\n10:30 – 12:05pm</strong></p>\n<p><st
 rong>J. Edgar Hoover\, Black Clergy\, and Martin Luther King\, Jr.</strong
 ><br />\nLerone A. Martin\, PhD\, Danforth Center on Religion and Politics
  at Washington University in St. Louis</p>\n<p><strong><i>The Feeling of B
 eing Watched</i>: A Filmmaker’s Response</strong><br />\nAssia Boundaoui\,
  The Inverse Surveillance Project<br />\nRabia Boundaoui<br />\nXiangnong 
 (George) Wang (moderator)\, Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetown L
 aw</p>\n<p><strong>Post-9/11 Watchlists</strong><br />\nHina Shamsi\, ACLU
  National Security Project</p>\n<p><strong>Community Reflections</strong><
 br />\nMembers of the Center for Media Justice’s National Delegation of MA
 SA Community Activists<strong></p>\n<p></strong></p>\n<hr />\n<p><strong>L
 UNCH BREAK<br />\n12:05 – 1:00pm</p>\n<p></strong></p>\n<hr />\n<p><strong
 >Life in Affected Communities<br />\n1:00 – 2:45pm</strong></p>\n<p><stron
 g>A Conversation on Countering Violent Extremism</strong><br />\nFaiza Pat
 el\, Brennan Center for Justice<br />\nAyaan Dahir\, Young Muslim Collecti
 ve<br />\nEric Rosand\, The Prevention Project<br />\nWilliam Braniff\, ST
 ART\, University of Maryland<br />\nAlvaro Bedoya (moderator)\, Center on 
 Privacy & Technology at Georgetown Law</p>\n<p><strong>“Mosque Crawlers” a
 nd the <em>Raza</em> and <em>Hassan</em> cases</strong><br />\nAsad Dandia
 \, NYU Graduate Student<br />\nFarhaj Hassan\, Muslims United For Justice<
 br />\nLaura Moy (moderator)\, Center on Privacy & Technology at Georgetow
 n Law</p>\n<p><strong>“If they should come for us”: A Poet’s Response</str
 ong><br />\nFatimah Asghar<br />\nRenata Barreto (moderator)\, Center on P
 rivacy & Technology at Georgetown Law</p>\n<hr />\n<p><strong>BREAK<br />
 \n2:45 – 3:00pm</p>\n<p></strong></p>\n<hr />\n<p><strong>Community Action
 <br />\n3:00 – 5:25pm</strong></p>\n<p><strong>Organizing after </strong><
 i><strong>Raza</strong><br />\n</i>Fahd Ahmed\, DRUM – Desis Rising Up & M
 oving</p>\n<p><strong>Stopping the Digital Muslim Ban: A Case Study</stron
 g><br />\nRachel Levinson-Waldman\, Brennan Center for Justice<br />\nNata
 sha Duarte\, Center for Democracy & Technology<br />\nYolanda C. Rondon\, 
 American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee<br />\nSteven Renderos\, Cente
 r for Media Justice<br />\nHarrison Rudolph (moderator)\, Center on Privac
 y & Technology at Georgetown Law</p>\n<p><strong>Organizing in Silicon Val
 ley</strong><br />\nMaya Berry\, Arab American Institute<br />\nMichelle M
 iller\, Coworker.org<br />\nJameson Spivack (moderator)\, Center on Privac
 y & Technology at Georgetown Law</p>\n<p><strong>Organizing Locally</stron
 g><br />\nBrian Hofer\, Oakland Privacy</p>\n<p><strong>Religious Surveill
 ance and Intersectionality</strong><br />\nBrandi Collins-Dexter\, Color O
 f Change</p>\n<p><strong>“Stealth Wear”: An Artist’s Response</strong><br 
 />\nAdam Harvey</p>\n<hr />\n<p><strong>Closing Remarks<br />\n5:25 – 5:30
 pm</strong><br />\n<em>Reception to follow in Hart lobby</p>\n<p></em></p>
 \n<hr />\n<p><strong>Speakers:</strong></p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Fahd Ahmed<
 /strong> of Desis Rising Up and Moving\, a grassroots organizer on the iss
 ues of racial profiling\, immigrant justice\, and police accountability</l
 i>\n<li>Professor <strong>Brooke Allen</strong> of Bennington College\, au
 thor of <em><a class='' href='https://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/22/books/rev
 iew/Will.t.html' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer nofollow'>Moral 
 Minority: Our Skeptical Founding Fathers</a></em>\, a <em>New York Times</
 em> notable book</li>\n<li>Poet <strong>Fatimah Asghar</strong>\, author o
 f <em><a class='' href='https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/po
 ems/92374/if-they-should-come-for-us' target='_blank' rel='noopener norefe
 rrer nofollow'>If They Come For Us</a></em> & co-creator of the Emmy-nomin
 ated web series <em>Brown Girls</em></li>\n<li><strong>William Braniff</st
 rong> of the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses 
 to Terrorism (START)\, studies CVE and alternative counterterrorism approa
 ches</li>\n<li>Filmmaker <strong>Assia Boundaoui</strong>\, director of <e
 m><a class='' href='http://www.nybooks.com/daily/2018/04/21/the-fbis-vulga
 r-betrayal-of-muslim-americans/' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer 
 nofollow'>The Feeling of Being Watched</a></em>\, a “riveting” account (<e
 m>New York Times</em>) of surveillance of a suburban Muslim community in t
 he 1990s</li>\n<li>Professor <strong>John Coffey</strong> of the Universit
 y of Leicester\, a scholar of Tudor and Stuart-era surveillance of the Pur
 itans we now know as Pilgrims</li>\n<li><strong>Brandi Collins-Dexter</str
 ong> of Color Of Change\, a civil rights advocate on media\, environmental
  justice\, and economic issues</li>\n<li><strong>Ayaan Dahir</strong> of t
 he Minneapolis Young Muslims Collective\, a Somali American youth leader a
 nd civil liberties advocate</li>\n<li><strong>Asad Dandia</strong>\, M.A. 
 candidate in Middle Eastern Studies at New York University and plaintiff i
 n the <em><a class='' href='https://www.aclu.org/blog/national-security/di
 scriminatory-profiling/i-was-muslim-teen-under-nypd-surveillance-now-i-hav
 e' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer nofollow'>Raza v. NYPD</a></em
 > case</li>\n<li><strong>Natasha Duarte</strong> of the Center for Democra
 cy & Technology\, author of <em><a class='' href='https://cdt.org/insight/
 mixed-messages-the-limits-of-automated-social-media-content-analysis/' tar
 get='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer nofollow'>Mixed Messages: The Limits
  of Automated Social Media Analysis</a></em></li>\n<li>Professor <strong>S
 pencer Fluhman</strong> of Brigham Young University\, author of “<a class=
 '' href='https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1055&c
 ontext=mormonhistory#page=32' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer nof
 ollow'>An ‘American Mahomet’</a>: Joseph Smith\, Mohammad\, and the Proble
 m of Prophets in Antebellum America”</li>\n<li>Artist <strong>Adam Harvey<
 /strong>\, creator of <a class='' href='https://ahprojects.com/projects/st
 ealth-wear/' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer nofollow'>Stealth We
 ar</a>\, a clothing collection “inspired by traditional Islamic dress… rei
 magined in the context of drone warfare”</li>\n<li><strong>Syed Farhaj Has
 san</strong>\, a Sergeant in the U.S. Army Reserve and lead plaintiff in t
 he <em><a class='' href='http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2012/07/former_a
 merican_soldier_from_n.html' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer nofo
 llow'>Hassan v. City of New York</a></em> case</li>\n<li><strong>Brian Hof
 er</strong> of Oakland Privacy and the Privacy Advisory Commission of the 
 City of Oakland\, an advocate for <a class='' href='https://www.deportice.
 org/blog/' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer nofollow'>local anti-s
 urveillance legislation</a></li>\n<li>Professor <strong>Sylvester Johnson<
 /strong> of Virginia Tech’s Center for the Humanities\, co-editor of <a cl
 ass='' href='https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520287280/the-fbi-and-religi
 on' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer nofollow'><em>The FBI and Rel
 igion: Faith and National Security before and after 9/11</em></a></li>\n<l
 i><strong>Rachel Levinson-Waldman</strong> of the Brennan Center for Justi
 ce\, co-coordinator of the Immigrant Surveillance Working Group</li>\n<li>
 Professor <strong>Lerone Martin</strong> of the John C. Danforth Center on
  Religion and Politics\, a scholar on the <a class='' href='http://rac.ucp
 ress.edu/content/28/1/1' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer nofollow
 '>FBI’s mobilization of African American clergy</a> to discredit Dr. Marti
 n Luther King\, Jr.</li>\n<li><strong>Michelle Miller</strong> of <a class
 ='' href='http://coworker.org/' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer n
 ofollow'>coworker.org</a>\, leading facilitator of tech sector employee ac
 tivism and mobilization</li>\n<li><strong>Faiza Patel</strong> of the Bren
 nan Center for Justice\, author of an in-depth <a class='' href='https://w
 ww.brennancenter.org/sites/default/files/publications/Brennan%20Center%20C
 VE%20Report.pdf' target='_blank' rel='noopener noreferrer nofollow'>critiq
 ue</a> of federal CVE programs</li>\n<li><strong>Steven Renderos</strong> 
 of the Center for Media Justice\, co-organizer of a grassroots <a class=''
  href='https://www.reuters.com/article/us-ibm-immigration/ibm-urged-to-avo
 id-working-on-extreme-vetting-of-u-s-immigrants-idUSKBN1DG1VT' target='_bl
 ank' rel='noopener noreferrer nofollow'>petition to IBM</a> opposing the c
 ompany’s interest in ICE’s “Digital Muslim Ban”</li>\n<li><strong>Yolanda 
 Rondon </strong>of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee\, a civ
 il rights attorney critical of DHS surveillance initiatives</li>\n<li><str
 ong>Eric Rosand </strong>of the Prevention Project: Organizing Against Vio
 lent Extremism\, a non-resident Senior Fellow at Brookings\, and a former 
 State Department senior CVE official</li>\n<li><strong>Hina Shamsi</strong
 > of the American Civil Liberties Union\, which is challenging watchlists 
 as unfair and discriminatory</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Tickets: <a class='ai1ec-tick
 et-url-exported' href='https://www.eventbrite.com/e/color-of-surveillance-
 government-monitoring-of-religious-minorities-tickets-44923937707?mc_eid=d
 57dc607c8&mc_cid=dc8261e2cf'>https://www.eventbrite.com/e/color-of-surveil
 lance-government-monitoring-of-religious-minorities-tickets-44923937707?mc
 _eid=d57dc607c8&mc_cid=dc8261e2cf</a>.</p></BODY></HTML>
X-TICKETS-URL:https://www.eventbrite.com/e/color-of-surveillance-government
 -monitoring-of-religious-minorities-tickets-44923937707?mc_eid=d57dc607c8&
 mc_cid=dc8261e2cf
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
