Scripps College Logo

Close

About Scripps
At a Glance
  • Assessment and Institutional Research
  • Annual Financial Reports
  • WASC Reaffirmation Process
History
  • College Timeline
  • History of the Presidency
  • Scripps College Traditions
Initiatives
  • Centennial (Strategic) Plan
  • Diversity
  • Sustainability
  • Centennial Celebration
Our Campus
  • Scripps Merchandise
Administration
  • President
  • Board of Trustees
  • Senior Leadership
Claremont Colleges
Admission & Aid
Apply
  • First-Year Applicants
  • Transfer Applicants
  • QuestBridge Applicants
  • International Applicants
  • Homeschool Applicants
  • Veteran Applicants
Dates and Deadlines
Financial Aid
Visit
Why Scripps College
  • Scripps College Facts
  • FAQs
Contact Us
Academic Experience
Faculty
Majors & Minors
Academic Resources
  • Clark Humanities Museum
  • Department of Natural Sciences
  • European Union Center
  • Humanities Institute
  • Intercollegiate Feminist Center
  • Library
  • Registrar
  • Scripps College Press
  • Williamson Gallery
Post-Bacc Program
Research
Study Abroad
Life & Community
New Students
Creating Community
Leadership Center
Residential Vibrancy
Student Services
Contact Us
CARE@SCRIPPS
Career Planning & Resources
Title IX
  • Inside Scripps
  • Alums
  • Families
  • Careers
  • Giving
  • Events
  • Directory
Scripps Logo
  • Inside Scripps
  • Alums
  • Families
  • Careers
  • |
  • Giving
  • Events
  • Directory
  • About Scripps
    • At a Glance
      • Assessment and Institutional Research
      • Annual Financial Reports
      • WASC Reaffirmation Process
    • History
      • College Timeline
      • History of the Presidency
      • Scripps College Traditions
    • Initiatives
      • Centennial (Strategic) Plan
      • Diversity
      • Sustainability
      • Centennial Celebration
    • Our Campus
      • Scripps Merchandise
    • Administration
      • President
      • Board of Trustees
      • Senior Leadership
    • Claremont Colleges
  • Admission & Aid
    • Apply
      • First-Year Applicants
      • Transfer Applicants
      • QuestBridge Applicants
      • International Applicants
      • Homeschool Applicants
      • Veteran Applicants
    • Dates and Deadlines
    • Financial Aid
    • Visit
    • Why Scripps College
      • Scripps College Facts
      • FAQs
    • Contact Us
  • Academic Experience
    • Faculty
    • Majors & Minors
    • Academic Resources
      • Clark Humanities Museum
      • Department of Natural Sciences
      • European Union Center
      • Humanities Institute
      • Intercollegiate Feminist Center
      • Library
      • Registrar
      • Scripps College Press
      • Williamson Gallery
    • Post-Bacc Program
    • Research
    • Study Abroad
  • Life & Community
    • New Students
    • Creating Community
    • Leadership Center
    • Residential Vibrancy
  • Student Services
    • Contact Us
    • CARE@SCRIPPS
    • Career Planning & Resources
    • Title IX
Close
Search Scripps College
Scripps College News Feature Stories “We Have Come to Read the Books”

Close

Section Menu

  • Home
  • Student Life
  • Faculty Scholarship
  • Alum Newsmakers
  • Scripps In the News
  • Campus Updates

November 23, 2011

“We Have Come to Read the Books”

  • Feature Stories

Sarah Smilkstein ’11 dreams big.

Before graduating from Scripps College, she envisioned opening a community education center in an impoverished neighborhood in Mali.

“Poverty, desperation and, above all, ignorance, fuel the hate and destruction of groups like Al Qaeda and pull at the fissures of Malian society,” wrote Smilkstein, 22, in her proposal for a $10,000 Davis Projects for Peace grant, which she won.

“Education has the power to combat these evils.”

Smilkstein’s determination has paid off. She wrote in a recent blog entry that the library she worked tirelessly to bring to fruition in the Niamakoro neighborhood of Bamako, Mali, has opened its doors. Men, women and children eagerly visited the library to read the French books lining the center’s shelves.

“Possibly my favorite moment of the week came in the afternoon when one little girl, Aminata, who is clearly the ring leader of the class, showed up at the library door with 20 more first-graders behind her and declared, ‘An na na liburu kalan,’ which translates to, ‘We have come to read the books,'” Smilkstein wrote on her blog.

“The kids love the library. We have to push them out the door so that they go back to class or home for lunch,” she wrote in a recent e-mail from Mali.

A Scripps College summa cum laude graduate, Smilkstein majored in politics/international relations and French before leaving the United States for the African continent earlier this year.

Mali’s official language is French. Smilkstein, in an online interview with Scripps, said she originally considered going to Madagascar, but after researching how women are treated in Mali, she decided to go there instead. Newsweek magazine recently rated Mali as the fifth worst country in the world to be a woman.

“It is hard to be a woman in Mali. Coming from my upbringing and Scripps education, the fact that it was relatively acceptable for a man to grab my arm and not let go until I agreed to consider his marriage proposal was very hard to get used to,” said Smilkstein, who was awarded the college’s Padelford French Award earlier this year.

A native of Portland, Ore., Smilkstein was also awarded a $250 Napier Fellow from Pilgrim Place, a Claremont retirement community.

Once she returns from Mali, Smilkstein said she will work as an elementary school teacher in Baltimore through Teach for America.

“It seems surreal to imagine it right now, but I’m really excited,” she wrote in the e-mail. “I view it as part of the same broader commitment to reducing educational injustice.”

She encourages other Scripps students to step out of their comfort zone.

“Mali is not for everyone, but I would say, ‘Challenge yourself,'” Smilkstein said in a recent interview. “No matter where you go, do your best to stay flexible and open minded because an open mind is truly your best friend.”

Tags

  • Newsroom
About Scripps Visit Campus Request Info
Scripps college logo
1030 Columbia Avenue
Claremont, CA 91711
(909) 621-8000
  • Campus Map
  • Virtual Tour
  • Diversity
  • Centennial Plan
  • Employment
  • Scripps Merchandise
  • Emergency
  • Higher Education Opportunity Act (HEOA)
  • Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund (HEERF)

The Claremont Colleges.

© Scripps College | Accessibility | Nondiscrimination Statement | Privacy