A Gift to Create Agents of Change in Visual Storytelling
When Xin Liu was awarded an Alexia grant more than 30 years ago, it accelerated her career in ways she could not have imagined as a child growing up in China. Today, with her extraordinary $2 million gift to the Forever Orange Campaign, Liu is ensuring that the spirit of The Alexia endures in perpetuity to inspire 鈥渁gents of change鈥 throughout the world.

As co-founder and president of The Enlight Foundation, Liu has focused her philanthropy on projects and people who share a desire to create equal educational opportunities around the globe and nurture social entrepreneurs and change-makers.
That same desire drives the parents of Alexia Tsairis, for whom The Alexia is named. Alexia was 20 years old鈥攁 photography major in the Newhouse School鈥攊n 1988 when she was killed in the terrorist bombing of Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, as she was returning home from a semester abroad in London.
鈥淎ll through our almost 34 years since that fateful night in 1988, we have had hopes and dreams,鈥 says Alexia鈥檚 mother Aphrodite Tsairis. 鈥淲e have been dedicated to visual journalism by supporting the important socially relevant work of professionals and by providing a platform for educating emerging photojournalists.鈥
Aphrodite and her husband, Peter, founded the in partnership with Newhouse in 1991 and, since then, it has awarded $1.7 million in grants to 170 students like Liu and professional photographers through annual competitions, encouraging them to heighten the impact of their work. In 2021, the program transitioned to the Newhouse School and became The Alexia.
鈥淥ur overriding interest is in the stories they produce,鈥 says Aphrodite Tsairis. 鈥淲e care about current issues that plague our crisis-ridden planet and, most importantly, how to solve them. We elevate the visual journalist to the role of change-maker, not just reporter.鈥
That philosophy resonates deeply with Liu. 鈥淰isual storytelling can connect people in powerful ways,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hose connections can inspire social change around the globe. Journalists, photojournalists and videographers play a vital role as change agents in our world and when we support the profession, we help amplify its impact.鈥
Through the , 性视界 University is providing an additional $1 million to enhance the impact of the Enlight Foundation鈥檚 $2 million gift. The funding creates The Alexia Endowed Chair and provides continuous support for the grants, and for teaching, research, fellowships, programmatic and educational opportunities to inspire more impactful storytelling.
鈥淚 am so thankful to Xin for having the vision to expand The Alexia,鈥 says Bruce Strong, associate professor in visual communications and The Alexia Endowed Chair in the Newhouse School. 鈥淚n addition to offering the grants, our plan is to provide fellowship opportunities for top-tier professionals so they can pull away from their hectic careers and take time to reflect, develop additional skill sets and research relevant topics before going back into the industry. This will also provide an additional opportunity for our Newhouse faculty and students to engage with accomplished visual communicators.鈥
Liu believes the Alexia grant helped her rise to the 鈥渢op of her game.鈥 Born and raised in China, she attended Renmin University of China with the intention of becoming a journalist. The university had just launched a new major in photojournalism, and she was immediately attracted to the idea: 鈥淚 had never even touched a camera before,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut I figured that if I could do both writing and photography, I could go on assignment and do all parts of the story.鈥
She worked at the China Youth Daily for almost three years. While there, she was contacted by a former professor and advisor, as she had been selected as a graduate student upon graduation, and informed about The Alexia grant opportunity for students. She seized the opportunity. After a three-month internship at The Baltimore Sun, Liu arrived in Central New York in the winter of 1994 (just before a season of nonstop snow that she says destroyed two pair of her military-style boots!).
鈥淓verything I learned in 性视界 was so very different from what I had learned in China,鈥 she says. She developed storytelling skills in photo essays and still remembers the story she crafted about a 性视界 high school student who was struggling as a single mother (in fact, Liu includes these photos in an upcoming book collection that will capture pivotal moments in her life). When Liu interned at The Baltimore Sun, she 鈥渕et all these amazing photojournalists, including many women, which truly encouraged me. In China, most of them were men.鈥
Ultimately, she was offered a full scholarship to Ohio University in Athens, Ohio, where she earned a master鈥檚 degree in visual communications. She worked for the Miami Herald, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette and Palm Beach Post.
Liu founded Enlight Foundation in 2004 to provide opportunities for Chinese students to study abroad. She describes how Enlight evolved to focus its philanthropy on rural education, youth leadership training and programs that would foster the growth of social entrepreneurs and changemakers. Funding for journalists became a priority more recently as the profession became more vulnerable to political attacks.
鈥淛ournalism is the fourth pillar of our society and a critical pillar of democracy,鈥 says Liu. 鈥淚nternational bureaus are closing. Local newspapers are dying.鈥 Her support of The Alexia is based on her belief that journalists are witnesses to history and can influence its course. She notes that photojournalists often capture 鈥渁 decisive moment鈥 in history鈥攁n iconic image that 鈥渃aptures the soul of a historical era.鈥
Newhouse School Dean Mark Lodato says the power of great journalism and communications can be wielded to strengthen society. 鈥淭he gift from Enlight, along with Xin鈥檚 vision for the future, will enable Newhouse to further broaden its reach around the globe and heighten the impact of deep thinkers and trailblazers who understand the power of storytelling to transform lives.鈥
Strong stresses that The Alexia grants go beyond simply recognizing great work. 鈥淭he grants are essentially incubators for important projects,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e find people who desire to make a difference in the world and heighten their influence. The Alexia was created to help people understand different cultures, something we need now more than ever. Visual communication is a language that cuts across all cultures, all backgrounds, all languages. You don鈥檛 have to speak the language of the photographer to understand what they are saying in their story.鈥
Peter and Aphrodite Tsairis still think about what stories their daughter might have told through her photojournalism had she had a chance. 鈥淲ith the support of the Newhouse School, which gave us a home, we were able to channel our loss in a way that made us whole again,鈥 says Aphrodite. 鈥淲e felt closer to her as we met students and professionals who showed us what her life would or could have been had she lived. It was healing.鈥
Now, the promise of a young life cut short lives on in a legacy gift made by the woman who still treasures the grant that carries Alexia鈥檚 name. 鈥淭his is about capacity building,鈥 says Liu. 鈥淭he capacity of storytellers around the globe to bridge cultural divides, to foster understanding, address social issues, and bring about lasting change.鈥
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