Brown University holds emotional memorial service honoring murdered students

Friends and faculty paid tribute to Ella Cook and MukhammadAziz Umurzokov who were killed in the December campus shooting

Framed photographs of MukhammadAziz Umurzokov and Ella Cook decorate a makeshift memorial at the Van Wickle Gates of Brown University on Dec. 16, 2025.
Framed photographs of MukhammadAziz Umurzokov and Ella Cook decorate a makeshift memorial at the Van Wickle Gates of Brown University on Dec. 16, 2025.
Joshua Wheeler/Ocean State Media
Share
Framed photographs of MukhammadAziz Umurzokov and Ella Cook decorate a makeshift memorial at the Van Wickle Gates of Brown University on Dec. 16, 2025.
Framed photographs of MukhammadAziz Umurzokov and Ella Cook decorate a makeshift memorial at the Van Wickle Gates of Brown University on Dec. 16, 2025.
Joshua Wheeler/Ocean State Media
Brown University holds emotional memorial service honoring murdered students
Copy

Nine weeks after the deadly campus shooting at Brown, the campus is still in mourning.

Brown University president Christina Paxson paid tribute Saturday to the two students killed when a gunman opened fire in the university’s engineering building Dec. 13.

“Ella and Mukhammad must be remembered,” she said, at the packed memorial service. “They were everything we hope to see in our students: whip-smart, intellectually curious, kind, and generous, each in their own distinct ways.”

Freshman Vanessa Finder said of Umurzokov, “He helped me fall in love with Brown.”

She lived next door to the 18-year-old first-year student in the Brown dorms. The two shared an interest in neuroscience. Finder described him as affable, intelligent, and incredibly funny.

“I don’t think anyone has made me laugh as hard as he did,” she said.

She also described how supportive he was as a friend.

“Whenever I needed to go somewhere, he would always say yes and accompany me, just so I wouldn’t have to be alone,” she said, describing him as “one of the most loyal people I have ever met.”

Sophomore Elina Coutlakis-Hixson, who was close friends with Cook, appeared to struggle to hold back tears during her eulogy.

“Ella would wear bright pink sweaters and big gold hoop earrings and floor length green coats on gloomy days,” she remembered wistfully.

“She could do math that looked like hieroglyphics and spoke French with graceful precision and finesse,” Coutlakis-Hixson said.

Cook, a 19-year-old sophomore, had just been elected president of the college Republican club and was looking forward to a semester abroad in France.

At the close of the service, Brown’s vice president of community engagement Mary Jo Callan invited the congregation to light candles in honor of Cook and Umurzokov.

“In lighting our candles, we honor their enduring presence in each of us,” Callan said.

The Pulitzer Prize-winning scholar of the American Revolution taught at Brown University for decades and was one of the country’s most influential historians
The legislation comes after a scathing report that detailed decades of clergy abuse and potential cover-ups within the Diocese of Providence
Why is progress on the state’s top hurdles so elusive?
A new state report lays out the numbers behind a familiar problem: fewer doctors, longer waits and growing barriers to care
Wilbury’s ‘Girl from the North Country’ brings Bob Dylan’s music to a moving Great Depression-era story, while the Gamm’s ‘Cat on a Hot Tin Roof’ delivers big performances for a towering classic
The Rhode Island Foundation CEO says fixing the state’s school funding formula is urgent for students, the economy and Rhode Island’s future