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For Immediate Release February 8, 2008 |
Public Information Office 310 Owen Hall, Campus PO 1820 Asheville, NC 28804-8507 828/251-6526 - FAX: 828/251-6677 web: http://www.unca.edu/news e-mail: pubinfo@unca.edu |
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Anonymous Donor Provides Global Travel, Volunteer Opportunities
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Many students enter college wanting to change
the world. Matt Rumley certainly did. At UNC Asheville, Rumley
harnessed that youthful idealism to real-world solutions through
studies in international human rights law. And when he became the
first student to take advantage of the University's new Mountains to
the World Travel Fund, he realized that the world could change him.
The Mountains to the World Travel Fund was created in fall 2007
through a grant from the Community Foundation of Western North
Carolina to make international volunteerism a reality for UNC
Asheville students. The $100,000 gift provides a stipend for travel
to destinations around the globe, allowing students to experience
new cultures while volunteering to help the neediest people in those
countries. The work is meant to be tough as well as eye opening.
Rumley traveled to rural Honduras in November with volunteers from
the Asheville-based Hope Center. Rumley, the only college student on
the trip, worked on facility repairs at an orphanage and assisted a
medical team as they treated the local population.
"To torture a cliché, this trip changed my life," Rumley said. "My
perspective on the world shifted because I was taken out of my
comfort zone and put into true poverty. My experiences posed the
greater question of how I can change the world, so it was a total
affirmation of what I want to do after graduation."
Rumley, who graduated from UNC Asheville in December, is applying to
graduate school at the University of Essex and the University of
London, where he hopes to pursue a degree in international human
rights law.
Mark Gibney, UNC Asheville Belk Professor of Humanities and
coordinator of the Mountains to the World Travel Fund, believes that
the connections between the experiences students have while
traveling and their academic goals is what makes the fund so
important.
"This fund will help UNC Asheville students become global citizens,"
Gibney said. "It's my hope that our students will go from the
mountains to the world, and home again, bringing back to campus what
they've learned. I want our students to get excited about the rest
of the world and to allow that enthusiasm to inform their academic
pursuits, their undergraduate research and even their career goals."
Gibney emphasized that the fund is an especially perfect fit for UNC
Asheville's liberal arts mission.
"One of the hallmarks of the liberal arts education is discovering
the sense of the other – learning about the lives of people who
exist in diverse times and places," he said. "Travel is absolutely
the most efficient way of doing this, and by volunteering while
abroad, our students also gain a stunning glimpse into the lives of
people very different than themselves."
The $100,000 donation will be used to aid students over the next
three years. In addition to Rumley, dozens more students have
already applied to become Mountains to the World Fellows, including
14 who will travel to Montero, Bolivia during spring break. Students
may choose to join a charitable organization traveling to another
country – as Rumley did, they can pursue faculty-led travel
opportunities, or students can organize their own service learning
trip. Each student can receive up to $1,200 for airline tickets and
other incidentals on trips ranging from two weeks to a full
semester.
Rumley's nine-day trip took him to a coffee-growing region outside
Santa Barbara, Honduras. He spent his days pouring concrete, fixing
plumbing and hanging out with the kids, who were desperate for
affection and interaction. He also assisted the Hope Center's
medical team when they went on house calls in remote mountainous
areas. He was even permitted to observe surgeries.
"The work was hard and the range of emotions that I experienced with
the children was tough," he said. "But I found it hard to leave. I
wanted to stay for another month or two."
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