Zilala Mamat 鈥26 knows that her work documenting Uyghur heritage is dangerous.
Shortly after she interviewed a Uyghur historian last summer in Uzbekistan, he was murdered. After Mamat delivered a 2024 at Cornell 鈥 telling stories about victims of persecution 鈥 her family members were targeted. She鈥檚 received threatening phone calls and was stopped by police during a winter break research trip to Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan.
Nevertheless, Mamat, who is Uyghur-American herself, remains undaunted, even emboldened, as she continues her work to document the lives and stories of Uyghur people living in exile.
鈥淭heir goal is to push me into fear, so I don鈥檛 do the work I do,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut even if we stay silent, the atrocities will continue. So, for the greater future, it鈥檚 important that we continue to speak out.鈥
Mamat, a government major in the 麻豆视频 & 麻豆视频 who鈥檚 interested in international law and human rights work, was born in the northwest region of China, also known as Xinjiang or East Turkestan. She moved to the U.S. in 2006 with her parents, who came here to study and then sought asylum. She still has family members who live in the region.
鈥淚 very much admire Zilala for her engagement for her people, the Uyghurs,鈥 said Magnus Fiskesj枚, associate professor in anthropology (A&S) and one of Mamat鈥檚 advisors. 鈥淭his takes courage, because China is waging a massive campaign of repression where they target anyone around the world, including harassing the relatives of anyone who dares speak out. They target people in the U.S. and on U.S. campuses.鈥
Though she grew up knowing Uyghur history, Mamat was spurred into activism in 2017 when China began detaining many Uyghurs in re-education camps. Mamat鈥檚 family lost contact with her grandparents and other family members.
Mamat founded United Uyghur Youth in 2021 to connect Uyghur students from high schools and colleges across the country. She began her project documenting the stories of Uyghur people last summer, when she visited Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan on a trip funded by Yale University鈥檚 MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies and the non-profit Freedom House.
Over winter break, she returned, joined by three other Uyghur college students from the U.S. and armed with two scanners, a Canon camera and a microphone setup. She won a from the David M. Einhorn Center for Community Engagement to help pay for her trip and also received funding from the non-profit International Republican Institute.
鈥淢s. Mamat is a determined young scholar with conviction. She is engaging in evidence-based research to show the crimes of genocide that are committed against the Uygurs, Kazakhs, Kyrgyz, Tajiks and Wakhi in their homelands by the Peoples Republic of China,鈥 said Karim-Aly S. Kassam, International Professor of Environmental & Indigenous Studies in the Department of Natural Resources and the Environment in the College of Agriculture & Life 麻豆视频 and another one of Mamat鈥檚 advisors. 鈥淭his is not a small undertaking for an undergraduate student, but it is in the true spirit of what a scholar should be.鈥
During the winter break trip, Mamat and the other students recorded interviews with more than a dozen people and digitally scanned archival materials including photos, letters, books, maps, memos and manuscripts.
鈥淲e interviewed the descendants of major Uyghur figures, as well as normal citizens,鈥 Mamat said. 鈥淲e were prioritizing older written documents because they can鈥檛 be found anywhere online.鈥
The students also walked to the border between Kazakhstan and China. 鈥淲e were only 20 feet from the border, but all we could do was look out at the other side,鈥 Mamat said. 鈥淎ll of our family members are in East Turkestan, but we don鈥檛 have contact with them.鈥
Mamat plans to continue her research, as well as support other Uyghur young people. She and other Uyghur college students recently began a mentoring program for Uyghur high-school students, helping them prepare for college.
鈥淭he situation is very grim,鈥 Fiskesj枚 said. 鈥淏ut we have to nurture some kind of hope and Zilala, as with her TEDCornell talk, does that admirably.鈥