Stockton Student Mahalia Bazile Spending 8 Weeks in Cape Town, South Africa on State Dept. Scholarship
For Immediate Release; with photos on flickr
Contact: Maryjane Briant
News and Media Relations Director
Galloway, N.J. 08205
Maryjane.Briant@stockton.edu
(609) 652-4593
stockton.edu/media
Galloway, N.J. - Stockton University student Mahalia Bazile will be staying with a family for part
of the eight weeks she is spending this summer nearly 8,000 miles from her New Jersey
home.
Bazile won the U.S. Department of State’s Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship and left her hometown of Newark for Cape Town, South Africa earlier this month. “I love it here!” she said in a recent email.
“I wanted to travel to South Africa to learn indigenous languages and culture, because, as a black person in predominantly white institutions, I want to understand the history and cultural value that lies in Cape Town,” she said. “In times of increased cultural misunderstandings and racial tensions, I am deeply interested in learning about South African social culture after apartheid, to build and gain through interpersonal experience a more inclusive and global perspective of the world and its agents.”
Bazile, a Communications major with math and political science minors, will be a senior
in the fall.
“I set myself out to be well rounded in my academic career, but most importantly,
my way of thinking,” she said “This is in the hope of one day becoming a news executive
producer, or possibly a commentator, to take charge of the narrative and relay facts
to the people that represent them and their interests.”
At Stockton, she served as a student senator in her freshman and sophomore years.
She joined the Unified Black Students Society (UBSS) as a freshman, subsequently becoming
secretary, then vice president and now president. She is also active in Zeta Phi Beta
Sorority, Inc. “My chapter - Phi Mu, has meant so much to me and has played such
an incredible role in my time here at Stockton,” she said.
She plans to learn some of the indigenous languages such as Afrikaans or Xhosa, and to play traditional instruments including the uhadi, a mouth bow. She is looking forward to learning cultural dances such as the Isicathulo, in which dancers stamp the ground wearing “gumboots,” or wellingtons, all in one of the world’s most multicultural cities.
“Stockton has provided me with unique opportunities to shine and grow in my abilities as a student and soon to be working professional,” Bazile said. She started as an Educational Opportunity Fund (EOF) student and now works mentoring other students in the Coordinated Actions to Retain and Educate (CARE) program.
“In my time here I have gotten to know the diverse stories of students and faculty that continue to motivate me to seek adventure as well as knowledge. I have gotten the opportunity to be on Student Senate, a Residential Assistant, and now president of UBSS, and these positions have made me cherish Stockton all the more,” Bazile said.
This trip is another step on her journey.
“I care dearly about developing connections with people through valuing our differences,”
she said. “I encourage myself and others to learn more about how to value and appreciate
people for their identity. I believe we cannot limit ourselves to the social norms
or pressures that seem so commonplace in our society. This goes for racial differences,
cultural differences, differences in sexual orientations, or religion - the list goes
on.
“What matters is for us to learn from our history in how poorly we’ve handled difference,
reconcile with it, and learn from it to ensure we move forward in a positive direction.”
Bazile is working on developing a blog, so check later for posts about her trip on:
onestepfromtheheart.tumblr.com
The U.S. Department of State’s Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship is a grant program enabling students of limited means to study or intern abroad and
gain skills that support the nation’s security and economic competitiveness. Gilman,
a Republican congressman from New York who died in 2016, focused on foreign policy
throughout his 30 years of service.
For more information about Stockton University, visit stockton.edu.
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