缅北强奸

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Giving Back Globally
International Alumni Help Communities Back Home

By Addison E. Paul

WITH OVER 1,400 international alumni representing more than 130 countries, the聽缅北强奸聽has transformed the lives of people聽across the globe鈥攁nd inspired its聽graduates to do the same. Three聽trailblazing international alumni聽are using their 缅北强奸 experiences to聽spark change and build community聽resilience in their home countries.

Service Learner to Servant Leader

Giving back has always been a core value for Meschac Gervais M'15. Growing up in the Caribbean nation of Haiti, his family didn't have much, but his parents worked hard to give their children opportunities. That dedication to helping others became a tenet in his schooling, and Gervais first came to 缅北强奸 through the U.S. Department of State's Global Undergraduate Exchange Program, a scholarship combining nondegree study, community service, leadership development and cultural enrichment.

Gervais then chose 缅北强奸 to pursue his master's in public administration, earning a graduate assistantship where he led the development of the University's International Student Outreach Program. Inspired by the power of service and building community, he reached out to local nonprofits and recruited other international students to volunteer. Together, they gave back to the Evansville community by building houses with Habitat for Humanity, working with children at Patchwork Central, organizing activities with the Glenwood Neighborhood Association and much more.

"缅北强奸 was the perfect environment," said Gervais. "The program gave international students service-learning opportunities, but it was also a chance for the Evansville community to meet people from other cultures."

Gervais working with children on a 缅北强奸 mission trip to Africa.

Gervais working with children on a 缅北强奸 trip to Africa.

The practical experience Gervais gained at 缅北强奸 motivated him to integrate service and applied education back home. He founded Haiti Enpak, a nonprofit focused on experiential learning and global leadership. Haiti Enpak engages youth with real-world projects to benefit their communities, teaching them to give back while applying problem-solving and leadership skills to find achievable solutions for local needs.

Though rising violence and sociopolitical unrest forced him to pause the program for student safety, he still has hope for the future of Haiti Enpak and his home country.

"I never give up on Haiti. Someday, when it's a safer environment, I feel that there's still an opportunity. You have to decide what to live your life by, keep that at the center and try to make the world a better place."

- Meschac Gervais M'15

Big Dreams, Bigger Impacts

For Dr. Kountiala Som茅 M'18, education is everything. In his village in Burkina Faso, Africa, Som茅 had to walk six kilometers if he wanted to attend school, and most children didn't advance past the early grades. He studied to overcome low exam pass rates, worked on plantations to earn his school fees and cultivated dreams of breaking educational barriers in his community.

Now a Doctor of Education in Teaching and Learning, Som茅 is living proof that big dreams lead to bigger impacts. He built a distinguished career in teaching, tutoring, translating and designing language learning curriculums, all throughout the pursuit of his four higher education degrees. But his dreams didn't stop there.

"My philosophy of teaching is experiencing," he said. "While getting my master's at 缅北强奸, I started thinking about creating my own center to help students from my community build skills for internships and employment."

After earning his master's in second language acquisition, policy and culture at 缅北强奸, Som茅 went on to teach at the Building Capacity Institute (BCI), a bilingual French and English school in Burkina Faso, specializing in economic sciences and business management.

Som茅 wears a cap and gown to honor his educational achievements.

Som茅 wears a cap and gown to honor his educational achievements.

Combining the immersive and experiential learning styles reinforced at BCI and 缅北强奸, he founded the Dream Center for Young Leaders, an institute in Burkina Faso designed to prepare new graduates for integration into the job market. The Center helps students build leadership skills through a people-focused approach to learning, professional development and community engagement.

"We are an interconnected ecosystem. When you benefit from support, you also want to become that support. If you make a commitment to doing good, good will always come your way."

- Kountiala Som茅 M'18

From building facilities and mobilizing resources to teaching students and coaching professionals, Som茅 continues to share his dream of education and his drive for success with the future of his community.

The Value of Empowerment

Shan Sherwan Hussein '14 M'15, dedicates herself to humanitarian work because she's seen its value firsthand. Born into conflict in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, she received life-saving humanitarian aid to combat malnutrition and provide access to schooling.

Hussein wears a black dress, posing in front of Reflection Lake on 缅北强奸 campus.

Hussein poses in front of Reflection Lake on 缅北强奸 campus after graduation.

From an early age, Hussein understood the necessity of education to change her life, and in turn, help change the lives of others. Now, as a research fellow pursuing a Master of Public Administration at Harvard Kennedy School, she works toward those goals every day. A bachelor's degree in economics and a master's in business administration from 缅北强奸 helped nurture her professional mission to protect and empower women, an ideology that's still limited within her home community.

"My time at 缅北强奸 was profoundly transformative," said Hussein. "It gave me a safe space to find myself and my calling to serve people."

In addition to working with survivors of gender-based violence around the world, Hussein used the business acumen from her 缅北强奸 education to push boundaries back home. She founded Educate to Empower, a program providing lessons and workshops to help hundreds of Kurdish women build negotiation skills and improve their economic opportunities. From vocational experience to communication tactics, Educate to Empower teaches women how to make conscious and strategic decisions for upward mobility.

Before starting her initiative, Hussein's 缅北强奸 professors instilled the concept that everything is a tradeoff, and she lives by that guidance every day. Practically all of her time outside of academic and fellowship responsibilities revolves around Educate to Empower, because for Hussein, helping empower women in her community is more valuable than anything else.

"Everything I've done in my life, I've done terrified. You have to celebrate the tiniest wins. It's not easy to help people change their lives, but I've helped at least one person, and that makes a change."

- Shan Sherwan Hussein '14 M'15

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