Student Stories
Heaven Tesfamariam
Ellis Civic Fellowship
Medical Anthropology & Global Health and Political Science major, UW class of 2019
The Ellis Fellowship had an impact on my post-graduation plans because of the service component, which made me more involved in my community–especially the Eritrean Community Center. One of my biggest commitments with them has been mentoring YPFDJ (Young People Stand for Democracy and Justice).
Ellis Fellow Capstone
I work with an Eritrean youth group; my work has included organizing a career day, networking events and campus visits.
Service Commitments as a Fellow
My longest commitment was Bryant Elementary School. I worked with them since the spring quarter of my freshmen year. I worked there with their health room and it was fun because I got to interact with all of the kids. It was a Nurse Assistant position where I would take care of the kids if they had fallen and needed a bandaid or if their tummy isn’t feeling well. When I started at UW, I was on the nursing track and Bryant elementary served a purpose to build experience.
I also worked with Mary’s Place, a homeless shelter for families. What I later discovered is that Mary’s Place was a shelter I stayed at with my family when I was younger so it was great to remake that connection and work with them. There are a lot of East African refugees so I got to use my language skills and help the client communicate with the shelter.
Social Issues of Interest
One of them is racial equity and it’s been a theme throughout my four years here and in other work that I’ve done. Homelessness is the second issue. Having been someone who experienced homelessness when I was younger wanted to address throughout my time here and throughout my service.
Post-Graduation Plan
Learn more about this opportunityThe first step is going back home (Eritrea) and do national service there for two years. The Ellis Fellowship had an impact on my post-graduation plans because of the service component, which made me more involved in my community–especially the Eritrean Community Center. One of my biggest commitments with them has been mentoring YPFDJ (Young People Stand for Democracy and Justice) because I held leadership positions with them when I was in high school. So that’s been a huge part of my Ellis Fellowship and being involved in my community in that way led me to want to go back and serve.
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Joy Levine
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Monika
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Shruti
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Tehya Widmann
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Vy Tran
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