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Campus & Community

Humanities New York Grant Supports Narratio Fellowship Work with Local Refugee Youths

Friday, July 17, 2020, By Dan Bernardi
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College of Arts and SciencesHumanities Center

Brice Nordquist, associate professor of writing studies, rhetoric and composition and Dean’s Professor of Community Engagement in the College of Arts and Sciences (A&S), is a recipient of a that will fund this year’s Narratio Fellowship, with additional financial resources from A&S, 鶹ƵUniversity Humanities Center and Wesleyan University’s Patricelli Center for Social Entrepreneurship.

HNY Action Grants support humanities projects that encourage public audiences to reflect on their values, explore new ideas, and engage with others in their community.

Three people talking

2019 Narratio Fellows Fidaa Aljabbari, Eid Ahmed and Abshir Habseme participating in an audio recording workshop at the North Side Learning Center.

Launched in 2019, in collaboration with the Humanities Center and the North Side Learning Center (NSLC) in Syracuse, the provides local refugee youth with opportunities to explore and represent a full range of their own histories and experiences through artistic expression.

According to Nordquist, the matching grant from HNY will help the program build on its successful inaugural campaign. “Receiving support from Humanities New York not only allows us to offer more resources and opportunities to this year’s cohort of Narratio Fellows, but also expands the audience of the fellows’ work and our network of collaborators to public humanities organizations across the state,” he says.

The fellowship is a four-week intensive storytelling and leadership program aimed at providing resettled refugee youth in the 鶹Ƶarea with the tools and resources to share their narratives and creative works on the world stage. The fellowship usually accepts 8-10 participants, ages 17 to 21, but due to the COVID-19 pandemic, this year’s cohort has been reduced to five to ensure safe distances in NSLC classrooms.

person sitting in chair

Jamal Bilata, 2019 Narratio Fellow, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. This summer’s New York City trip has been postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

This year’s summer session will run from July 20-Aug. 21 and will feature a hybrid format to limit the duration of face-to-face contact. Instead of conducting workshops at 鶹ƵUniversity and various local museums and galleries, all sessions will take place at the NSLC.

Artist-in-residence Ana Maria Vîdjea, a filmmaker, Fulbright alumna and transmedia M.F.A. candidate in the College of Visual and Performing Arts, and other workshop leaders will engage with the group virtually and will work with fellows one-on-one at the NSLC.

“Vîdjea will work with the fellows to produce autobiographical films about their day-to-day lives during the pandemic and in the context of Black Lives Matter and the pursuit of racial justice,” says Nordquist.

As a culmination to the four-week summer program, the cohort usually travels to New York City to share their work at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and meet with professionals at the United Nations, The New York Times and Squarespace. While the trip has been postponed for summer 2020 because of the pandemic, Nordquist hopes to reschedule it for late spring or summer 2021.

For the rest of the 2020-21 academic year, fellows will take part in numerous public virtual events—including film premieres, screenings and panel discussions—and will also receive individual college transition support. The year will conclude with a virtual event in spring 2021 connected to this year’s Humanities Center 鶹ƵSymposium: Futures.

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Dan Bernardi

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