Sara Zewde named National Olmsted Scholar


LA Foundation
May 14, 2014



Sara Zewde
Sara Zewde

Sara Zewde (MLA ’15) has been recognized as the 2014 graduate level National Olmsted Scholar. The award is the highest honor in the Landscape Architecture Foundation’s Olmsted Scholars Program, the premier national award program for landscape architecture students.

Sara intends to use the $25,000 award to return to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and New Orleans, Louisiana to continue working with the communities of Pequena África and Treme in designing their urban landscapes in a culturally and ecologically relevant manner. The award will also enable her to pursue additional projects where communities desire a spatial interpreter of cultural values.

Now in its seventh year, the Olmsted Scholars Program recognizes and supports students with exceptional leadership potential who are using ideas, influence, communication, service and leadership to advance sustainable planning and design and foster human and societal benefits.

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Young Ethiopian chemist considers medicine at Emory


By Kimber Williams
May 12, 2014

Yafet Mamo
Yafet Mamo

As Emory senior Yafet Mamo watched the young refugee student working feverishly to unravel the mysteries of the English language, he realized it was almost like looking into a mirror.

“That boy could be me,” he thought. “In fact, that boy was me…”

It’s not surprising that Mamo was drawn to volunteering with Project SHINE (Students Helping in Naturalization and English), a service-learning program offered through Emory’s Center for Community Partnerships (CFCP) that helps Emory students tutor refugees and immigrants trying to learn English and succeed in school.

Not long ago, Mamo was himself a young immigrant, newly arrived from Ethiopia and struggling to master English as a second language.

On Monday, he will receive a bachelor of science in chemistry from Emory College of Arts and Sciences, with post-graduate plans to attend medical school. Mamo is still weighing his options, having received acceptance letters from several top schools.

It’s been a long journey for the son of a political refugee whose family immigrated to the Atlanta area when he was 13 years old. They fled Ethiopia after his father, who was then a government employee, wrote an editorial that enraged government officials and eventually put his life — and the lives of family members — at risk in their home country.

Now, as Mamo prepares to graduate from Emory, he searches for the words to describe his feelings about that journey and how very far he’s come.

“One word that comes to mind is gratitude,” he says.

Finding support at Emory

Although Mamo is about to embark on the next chapter in his academic life, he can’t forget his experiences as an immigrant — a boy who spoke the universal language of “soccer” with other refugee children long before he mastered English.

In fact, he once assumed soccer was the only way he would ever get to college.

“My initial plan was kind of unrealistic and short-sighted — I thought I could get a full-ride soccer scholarship,” Mamo recalls, laughing. “Eventually I realized I wasn’t as good as I thought I was, which was a wake-up call.”

It was during Mamo’s senior year of high school that he stumbled across a reference that would prove life-changing: QuestBridge, a national college match program that links some of the nation’s brightest, under-served youth with leading institutions of higher education.

“Basically, they match a limited number of students from around the country to select schools,” he says. “Emory was one of those select schools, and they chose to sponsor me through a scholarship, which was, in effect, a full ride.”

“That’s the reason I’m here, the only way I could have afforded this kind of high-quality education,” he adds.

The perfect chemistry

Mamo arrived at Emory eager to take full advantage of the liberal arts experience, enjoying exposure to many academic disciplines along the path to choosing a major.

“I started looking at economics, because of my interest in social studies and public policy,” he says. “But because of my personality, I’ve always been able to connect with others, and that started me thinking about medicine.”

Taking an organic chemistry class with Emory chemistry lecturer Matthew Weinschenk his sophomore year sealed his decision. “That class knocked me out and told me that chemistry was what I really wanted to pursue,” Mamo recalls. “I knew I wanted to become a physician.”

“I’m not just interested in providing care in a clinical setting, but I want to be involved in public policy, helping address structural issues to create a more equitable health and education system,” he adds.


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