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Awards | Past Yarrow Winners



2009
Flojaune Griffin, MB05 ~ spent the summer of 2009 working on two projects in South Africa. Griffin is a doctoral candidate in Epidemiology at the University of Michigan School of Public Health.

"In conjunction with my host organization, TRG International (TRG), and with the support of Telluride Association’s Yarrow Award, I worked on two projects in South Africa during the summer of 2009: an early childhood education conference in Johannesburg and a college preparation mini-course in Durban.

One moving highlight were the workshops on CPR and First Aid I led at the Early Childhood Education Conference, the first in Soweto history, and for high school students at a leadership conference in Durban. Students told me stories of diabetic emergencies, cardiac arrest, and seizures and some of the misguided steps people in the community took to address them.

In Soweto, I was taken aback by a volunteer who agreed to help me demonstrate how to treat a burn and then began sobbing uncontrollably during the demonstration… She was overwhelmed with emotion because a child in her pre-school had been badly burned. Unfortunately, the injuries were worsened because the teachers were unsure how to attend to them. I realized then that their thirst for knowledge was not an academic pursuit or an enthusiasm for the unknown, but in fact personal; they wanted to know more to be able to better serve and protect their students, friends and families.

This project was academically relevant, but it was also personal. My Yarrow Award Project in South Africa overwhelmed, perplexed and inspired me in a way that I still struggle to describe. My travels have inspired … the drive to want to be of service to others in such a way that my travels benefit my community at home and those abroad. "


2008
Beenish Ahmed, MB07 ~ worked for a literacy/literary program for women and children in Pakistan.

"In my proposal, I wrote of my intentions to facilitate creative writing, but very soon found that the basic literacy level of students was not sufficient to work on literary undertakings. I think the construction of one's own personal narrative is of the utmost importance, especially for groups marginalized by socio-economic conditions. By and large the children of agricultural workers and domestic servants, the students at the Dosti School had exceptionally low literacy rates since their studies were so often interrupted to pursue odd-jobs to support the family. Thus, I worked to bolster their skills in Urdu and English and encourage further study in these fields that are so often sublimated to the presumed practicality of the hard sciences. To facilitate voice by more immediate means, I collected oral histories from students whenever time allowed while also keeping a daily log of what I experienced there. I am now working in collaboration with the Dosti School Administration Board to disseminate my collections and reflections on a website with the hope of raising funds to sustain the thirty-some schools run by the Dosti Foundation."


Children of the Dosti School, Pakistan.

2007
Alvar Ayala, MB06 ~ interned with a legal clinic for immigrant worker populations in Chicago.

""The Working Hands Legal Clinic, where I worked this summer, is a new organization whose young roots grow out of the worker centers in Chicago.  Worker centers are grass roots organizations that seek to educate an advocate on behalf of low wage workers with the community's support.  Chicago has five of such centers located in different parts of the city.  While worker centers work with African American, Polish immigrants, and anybody else in need, Latino immigrants, documented and undocumented alike, constitute the largest percentage of these centers' membership.  Working Hands arose to meet the centers' need for professional legal expertise and to increase their members' access to legal representation."

2006
Eunice Yu, MB04 ~ worked for the Development Bank of Southern Africa on HIV/AIDS prevention and completed an internship with the Program on International Health and Human Rights at the Harvard School of Public Health.

" My own neighborhood, where I lived in a formerly-white suburb with a middle-class black family, had open entrances but enclosed homes.  There was no way to ring the doorbell but to shake the gate.  The suburb next door had accessible doorbells but walled-in streets.  Universities are fortresses, and regular citizens must pay to merely enter their libraries, not to mention borrow books.  So while the exclusionary regional planning of apartheid no longer occurs and many blacks have returned to previously white areas, there is an emergent physical separation based on class.  Indeed, these barriers turned out to be more obstructive than I realized at the time.  In my funding proposal, I imagined I would be able to volunteer with other organizations beyond the bank.  I did not realize that the bank is situated an hour from both Johannesburg and Pretoria, in a string of intermediate suburbs and settlements connected by highways.  There is no practical public transportation, and I was not old enough to rent a car."


Eunice Yu in South Africa (Mpumalanga Province).  Additional photos: Drakensbergs, Women's Day in Pretoria

2005
Adey Fettene, SP00 CB01 ~ traveled to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia where she had first-hand experience of the post-election fallout, volunteered at the Mother Teresa Orphanage, and advance her research on LGBT experiences in the Ethiopian Diaspora.

2004
Shawna-Kim Lowey-Ball, SP00 CB01 TA04 ~ received support for volunteer work (with MercyCorps) and had the opportunity to observe elections in Indonesia.

"With the new (and ultimately quite successful) presidential elections looming, the university recruited me to get involved with observations and voter exit-interviews.  This task completely won me over.  As I talked to voters on Java (and later in Sulawesi), surveyed the press, watched the presidential debate, saw the fishing boats with party flags waving, and watched students protest against any presidential candidate who had formerly been a member of the Indonesian military, it became obvious that things were going to go off well.  The country was engaged, and I was too."


ShawnaKim Lowey-Ball, in Indonesia, pictured here with the crew of Channel 6 News outside the home of presidential candidate Amien Rais during the summer of 2004.  Additional photo: Brickmaking Project

2003
Henrique Suguri, SP99 CB00 TA01 ~ produced a film documentary exploring the gay community in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

2002
Aoife Naughton, CB00 ~ facilitated an environmental theater workshop for Belfast’s inner-city teens.

Theron Tingstad, MB01 ~ documented the activities of the Guadalupe Foundation in Honduras through film, photography, and drawing.

"While I was in Honduras, I met some of the most hospitable people in the world.  Despite their obvious poverty they took me into their homes and for the better part of three months I was a part of their lives.  I learned and taught sustainable agriculture methods, followed a doctor as he made his rounds through nearly inaccessible mountain villages, and I climbed Honduras' second highest mountain peak, staying the night atop the mountain beneath a 100 foot rainforest canopy.  I practiced all summer to be part of my town's rodeo team, and competed in an regional rodeo.  I only made it through two rounds of the rodeo, succumbing to an injury, but my town went on to win the rodeo.  A few nights later, at my going away party, my team-mates gave me a little keepsake, an unremarkable wooden statue. Later in the night I was overwhelmed to realize that they had given me the 1st place team trophy, to take back with me to the United States.  Without the Mike Yarrow award my project in Honduras would have been difficult if not impossible.  I highly recommend using it for a project in a developing country, where you can leverage the American dollar to get maximum support for your project."


Photo taken by Theron Tingstad in Honduras

2001
Jennifer “Vern” Long, CB99 TA02 ~ was granted funds for her project helping young women further their education in Zimbabwe.

"Given the serious economic recession in Zimbabwe and the contraction of the economy, it was difficult to identify girls who could take the time to study – as their families often preferred that they work.  Further complications included transportation problems and identifying a study area for the girls in the evenings.  Zimbabwe’s government rationed fuel for many months so public transportation was often non-existent and kerosene was also difficult to get.  These girls couldn’t afford adequate amounts of kerosene for their lamps at night - so after a full day of working, and since it was dark by 7PM, they didn’t have light by which to study."

Sarah Uhler Morton, MB00 TA01 ~ was awarded funds to study the correlation between maternal mortality and child morbidity/mortality in Haiti.

"Beyond the knowledge that I gained regarding public health methodologies and statistical techniques, I feel that my true education this summer came from traveling and living in a country so very different from my own. My experience with French allowed me to communicate with most of the people I encountered, and the bit of Creole that I learned helped when traveling in the rural villages.  Thinking back, I can close my eyes and be standing on the bumpy dirt road that lead into town, and I feel the terrain around me.   The situations that I encountered cannot be equated with anything that I ever expect to experience again.  On my first day in Jeremie, we traveled to a village that was a two hour hike through the forest.  When we reached the last stream that we needed to cross, there were two-score of women from the village waiting on the other bank, singing songs to greet us. The Mother’s Group of the villages had written the songs, and the lyrics enumerated the benefits of breast milk and eggs.   Once in the village I helped the HHF staff in conducting prenatal visits, tuberculosis and pneumonia screening, and polio vaccinations.  During the screenings for tuberculosis, two small children succumbed to their respiratory ailments.  Then, out of the blue, a woman in labor arrived at the village, and the visiting doctor delivered her baby with no medical supplies other than a pair of scissors that we had held over a flame to disinfect.  I have to say that my first day was quite an introduction to field medical care, and was a good measure of the intensity of the rest of my experiences.

2000
Seth Yalcin, MB99 ~ received support for a service project aimed at improving the educational opportunities in rural Nepal.


Seth Yalcin in Nepal

1999
Stanka Fitneva, CB98 TA01 ~ was granted funds for a project exploring psychological aspects of child development and primary education in Bulgaria.

"The Mike Yarrow award allowed me to work on a project I have been contemplating for a couple of years.   The motivation I had was to develop my professional connections with the Bulgarian day-care centers and schools I work with. . . The work on the project required me to acquire a lot of knowledge, e.g., about the methodologies used to study children . . . It also made me engage intellectually with some social and political issues that people living in Bulgaria face and forced on me the realization of how separated from my native country I am."


Stanka Fitneva -- a school in Bulgaria