HCMC in Minneapolis is grappling with tensions around an employee-planned discussion about Palestine that was approved but then called off by hospital leadership.
A group of employees at the safety-net hospital in downtown Minneapolis say they organized the event to discuss the effects to healthcare workers in Gaza amid the Israel-Hamas war. They say the decision to postpone it raises issues of academic freedom and is in opposition to hospital goals around racial equity. Three leaders of employee affinity groups have since resigned those internal roles in protest of the decision.
“Being an employee, and witnessing what’s happening in Palestine is not good for our mental health, and not being able to process and talk about it is not good for mental health,” said Eiko Mizushima, a Hennepin occupational therapist involved with the organizing.
Leaders at the hospital, which is run by the Hennepin Healthcare system, say they believed the focus of the event would be on Palestinian culture in conjunction with Asian and Pacific Heritage month. Concern grew amid word that it may have caught the interest of some outside demonstrators, Chief Health Equity Officer Nneka Sederstrom said.
“I’m not going to allow external people coming to an internal event that could cause disruption, that would cause issues for our patients ... our community is our top priority,” Sederstrom said.
Government agencies, schools, hospitals and other institutions have dealt with internal conflict related to the war in Gaza since it broke out last October. Employees and students who want to be able to react to world events that impact their mental health and work are butting up against officials and administrators who are trying to emphasize that such debates should be secondary to running places of business and learning.
At HCMC, members of several Asian, Muslim and LGBTQ collectives, which are employee affinity groups that focus on wellness, put together a joint statement on the Israel-Hamas war that they hoped to release publicly. They approached hospital administrators and diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) officials, who suggested as an alternative an event focused on Palestine.
The collectives went on to plan an event that would focus on Palestinian culture and history, and feature a discussion of how the situation in Gaza is affecting healthcare workers — in Palestine, locally and globally. Dr. Christine Harb, a local doctor who is Palestinian, was tapped as a speaker.