In Her Eyes
Exploring Muslim Identity
Ilana Alazzeh
Issue date: 10/2/08 Section: Features
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From first glance, one may look at Smith and see a small quaint town in the middle of nowhere with a pretty little college full of young women busying themselves with esoteric studies of all sorts. "Liberal Arts" has the sound of something creative and non-marketable. But that is the beauty of Smith. Encapsulated in a bucolic setting is a dynamo full of opportunities to expand your mind and soul. The quiet, laid-back setting offers up few distractions, but plenty of opportunity for intellectual and creative stimulation. Energy is routed toward art, self-expression, spiritual enrichment and intellectual rigor in a setting allowing for time to share these qualities of life with others.
On a quiet winter day, when the sleepy campus was silent and covered with snow, I roamed about capturing photos of the way snow held onto the living. On a sweltering hot day, I jumped into the lake and reveled in its relief and pleasure. On a weekend visit to a local church, I spent a couple of hours explaining Islam to a group of young children. And, on so many days, I come back from campus elated with the intellectual stimulation and adrenaline I feel after a discourse with an instructor who understood my point and expanded my understanding beyond what I had ever considered.
And, perhaps in contrast to the tiny pearls that I have described above, Smith has accommodated all of my needs. I have a private room; I have halal food and a choice of even kosher food. I have a Muslim Students Association that is dynamic and interacts with Hillel and the Five College Consortium. Here is the opportunity to expand into a broader world. All is for the taking, or not.


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