Narratio Fellowship Expands Creative Opportunities for Resettled Refugee Youth
In African philosophy, the term 鈥渦buntu鈥 can be translated as 鈥淚 am because we are.鈥 The phrase, which illustrates the notion that a person鈥檚 sense of self is shaped by their relationships with others, is the framework guiding this year鈥檚 Narratio Fellowship.
Now in its fourth year, the fellowship offers a platform for resettled refugee youth to share stories of their own histories and experiences through artistic expression. Under the guidance of mentors鈥攎any that include 性视界 University students who once took part in the fellowship themselves鈥攖he program provides opportunities for fellows to share their stories in a way that is authentic and meaningful to show the world that they are not solely defined by their experience of being displaced. Fellowship co-founder says the ubuntu concept is particularly fitting as the idea of collectivity鈥攚ithin communities, families and cultures鈥攊s prominent in the fellows鈥 work.

The Narratio Fellowship was started in 2019 by Nordquist, Dean鈥檚 Professor of Community Engagement and founding director of the 聽(EHN) in the聽, and , an Iraqi American author, poet and social entrepreneur. The fellowship is a collaboration of EHN, the North Side Learning Center in 性视界, the 听补苍诲听.
In its first three years, nearly 40 fellows in total from the 性视界 area took part in the program. As it grew, new opportunities for development came along, allowing the fellowship to increase its reach. In addition to 10 students in the 性视界 cohort this year, there are another 12 fellows making up a cohort in Richmond, Virginia. The expansion was made possible through a collaboration with , an organization that connects refugees to resources to help them establish roots in the United States, the Virginia Office of New Americans and Virginia Commonwealth University.
Learning the Art of Storytelling

Like in past years, the fellowship kicked off with a four-week intensive storytelling and leadership workshop during the summer. Nordquist served as project coordinator in 性视界 and Badr oversaw the group in Richmond. Through their ongoing collaboration with the Metropolitan Museum of Art (Met), fellows chose objects from the museum鈥檚 Ancient Near East Department as the basis for their projects.
鈥淲e had a couple of workshops over the summer with Met curators, conservators and educators to talk through materials, the history and uses of the objects,鈥 says Nordquist. 鈥淭hen the fellows tied their own memories, experiences and life moments to these objects.鈥
The 性视界 cohort was led by artists-in-residence Wendy Wang and Maleeha Bhadki, both students in the Newhouse School of Public Communications. Each are on the creative team at CODE^SHIFT (Collaboratory for Data Equity, Social Healing, Inclusive Futures and Transformation), a new multidisciplinary research space for communication and data justice founded by Newhouse Professor .
Wang and Bhadki worked with fellows throughout the summer on photo-poetry projects both on campus and at the North Side Learning Center in the City of 性视界. The photos and corresponding poetry articulate the fellows鈥 life experiences by re-imagining the stories behind Met objects.
The artist-in-residence for the Richmond cohort is聽, a Colombian painter and arts educator. He guided the students through their projects inspired by ancient Sumerian cylinder seals from the Met鈥檚 collection. The small round cylinders, dating back to the fourth millennium B.C., are engraved with characters or intricate designs as a form of personalization. When the seal is rolled into wet clay it leaves an impression and was used as a means of marking one鈥檚 property or making documents legally binding.
鈥淭he Richmond cohort was really into the personalized signature aspect, so they created their own cylinder seals out of wax candles,鈥 says Nordquist. Each student drew into the candles and carved designs to express their own personal story and then rolled them out into clay emulating the process used in Mesopotamia thousands of years ago.
Trip to the Met and Upcoming Exhibits
While the two groups met virtually through online workshops this summer, they will gather for the first time in person at the fellowship鈥檚 annual trip to New York City in November. Students will present a public performance at the Met and have the chance to see and hold the objects that inspired their projects. Fellows will also take part in a cylinder seal workshop at the museum where they will examine and be able to roll out seals from the Ancient Near East collection. In addition to the presentation and workshops at the Met, organizers are also planning a pop-up exhibit where the Richmond cohort will display their original cylinder seals and accompanying artwork.
The fellowship will culminate with two spring exhibitions that draw together the collective work of the fellows. Each cohort will join up in Richmond and 性视界 to present their projects to the public.
Sustained Growth
According to Nordquist, the fellowship has become more self-sustaining with each graduating class as many former fellows stay on and become mentors to the current cohort through paid assistantships. One of those is Rayan Mohamed, a transmedia major in the College of Visual and Performing Arts (VPA), whose motivation to become a filmmaker was sparked by her 2020-21 fellowship. That year the fellows鈥 projects focused on storytelling through film as they worked with artist-in-residence Ana V卯jdea G鈥20, an internationally recognized Romanian filmmaker and former Fulbright Fellow who earned an M.F.A. from VPA. Mohamed鈥檚 work with the fellowship this year is supported through Narratio.

Another former fellow and current mentor is Justo Antonio Triana, a classical civilization major in the College of Arts and Sciences. Triana joined the fellowship to grow creatively, become more aware of different cultures and realities, and further develop his writing in English. A member of last year鈥檚 poetry cohort, Triana is now passing on the lessons he learned about self-expression through writing to the current group of fellows. Triana鈥檚 mentorship position is made possible through a 性视界 University SOURCE research assistantship.
Nordquist says near peer mentors like Mohamed and Triana are critical to the future growth of the fellowship, both in 性视界 and Richmond. 鈥淚 am hoping to cycle 性视界 University students who are former fellows into mentorship positions in Richmond so the fellows there have the opportunity to learn from peers who have benefited from the fellowship,鈥 he says. The goal would then be to have current Richmond fellows become mentors to future Narratio cohorts in Virginia.
To maximize collaborative efforts, Nordquist is also working with Professor Katie Logan at Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU), who teaches in VCU’s Department of Focused Inquiry, to offer seminar classes to incoming college students. Just as the Central New York cohort is connected to resources at 性视界 University, fellows in Richmond are receiving similar support from VCU.
鈥淗opefully the relationship between 性视界 and VCU can grow between these interactions,鈥 says Nordquist, who notes that many students who take part in the fellowship later go on to attend 性视界 University. 鈥淭here鈥檚 great potential for the fellows in both Richmond and 性视界 to be connected to and matriculate at either SU or VCU.鈥
Looking to the future, Nordquist says they hope to expand regionally in New York state. They are exploring the possibility of establishing a cohort just east of 性视界 through a collaboration with the聽, an organization that supports resettled refugees by connecting them with educational opportunities and other resources. The fellowship may also soon launch its first international cohort in Manchester, U.K., which Nordquist says would be connected to the Museum of Manchester.
To learn more, read about the 聽and the聽.