Converting Passion & Purpose Into Advocacy & Activism听
By Sarah Achenbach ’88听
Whatever your political leaning, 2020 felt like an endless civics lesson.听听

Mary Catherine Andrews ’86 served as President Bush’s director of democracy for the National Security Advisory and as his director of global communications.
This isn鈥檛 another article about the recent U.S. presidential election, don鈥檛 worry. But it is about how political awareness and activism鈥攐n both sides of the aisle鈥攁re nurtured at Hollins University.听听
Last year, Hollins, once again, made The Princeton Review鈥檚 list of colleges with the 鈥淢ost Politically Active Students.鈥 Nestled between American University (#5) and Syracuse University (#7) and based on student ratings of their own political awareness, Hollins is the only women鈥檚 college on the list.听听
How does a women鈥檚 university focused on the liberal arts and the smallest higher educational institution by far on the annual ranking make the cut along with Columbia University and Reed College?听听
Simply by being a small, liberal arts women鈥檚 college, that鈥檚 how. Turns out that Hollins鈥 educational mission, approach, culture, and size have been the perfect incubator to turn passion and purpose into advocacy and activism. And Hollins has been doing it for generations.听
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Fostering an听听Environment of Respect听
Courtney Chenette 鈥09 isn鈥檛 one to let a teachable moment go to waste. Last November, Chenette, a civil rights attorney specializing in constitutional cases, worked as a recount observer for the Wisconsin vote recount for the presidential election.听

Chenette
In the evening, from her laptop in a Milwaukee hotel room, she hosted Zoom conferences with her Voting Rights and Election Law class at Hollins. Chenette, assistant professor of political science and gender and women鈥檚 studies at Hollins since 2018 and pre-law advisor, led students in analyzing the potential ballot recount challenges that Chenette and her legal colleagues reviewed earlier in the day.听听
鈥淪tudents crafted arguments for and against the challenges and applied our class readings,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚 teach that the best advocates know the rules and anticipate a plurality of arguments, requiring students to develop strong foundational knowledge and see beyond their own perspectives to make their strongest cases.鈥澨
When students can anticipate the strongest counterarguments to their beliefs, Chenette says, they become better advocates. 鈥淯nderstanding what the systems are and having the language to explain what is happening around you is not specific to one party,鈥 Chenette adds. 鈥淚f I were an attorney who refused to think about the other side, I wouldn鈥檛 be a very good attorney. Critical thinking and respect for the people behind the issues is important.鈥澨

Berny
Colleen Berny 鈥10, a self-described 鈥渢oken Republican鈥 in political science classes at Hollins, felt the same level of respect: 鈥淢y viewpoints were carefully considered and debated, and other viewpoints helped me figure out where I stood on the issues.鈥澨
鈥淚n order for things to move, you need to work across the aisle and around the table,鈥 says Berny, who is a staff member on the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs and advisor on critical infrastructure security and cybersecurity issues.听听
She鈥檚 been interested in security issues since September 11, 2001, a day that inspired her duty to serve. At Hollins, Berny, who is cochair of the Washington, D.C. Hollins Alumnae/i Association, majored in history with a double minor in English and political science, then earned an M.A. in public and international affairs (major: security and intelligence studies) from the University of Pittsburgh.听听
Mary Catherine Andrews 鈥86, senior advisor on communications, management, and international affairs for Vianovo and a former senior advisor to President George W. Bush, experienced the same level of respect among students of different political leanings.听听
Two pivotal events sparked her political career. 鈥淛ake Wheeler inspired my interest in politics,鈥 she says, recalling her first class with the late, legendary political science professor. 鈥淗e had a box of Ritz crackers and jar of peanut butter on his desk,鈥 she remembers. 鈥淗e put peanut butter on the crackers, passed them around, and told us to take a cracker and wait. Then he told us to eat our crackers, which was when he explained that the federal government does lots of things, including regulating the amount of rat hair in peanut butter.鈥澨
Andrews, a political science major with a concentration in computational sciences, dove into campus politics, and was elected as vice president of the Student Government Association (SGA) her junior year. Each week, she presided over robust Senate meetings filled with different viewpoints, ideas, and agendas from across the campus.听
She lauds those meetings and her love of the science behind the politics with inspiring her next step to Capitol Hill and her first job working for Sen. Cass Ballenger (R.-NC). Andrews, who earned an M.P.A. from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, quickly found a passion for international relations. During the Bosnian War, she worked in the Balkans for the International Republican Institute, has observed more than 25 elections in 12 countries, and is the author of eight books on democratic development in Central and East Europe.听听
Her greatest honor, she says, was serving as President Bush鈥檚 director of democracy for the National Security Advisory and as his director of global communications, experiences that reinforced her Hollins鈥 SGA bipartisan approach. 鈥淥ne of the big lessons I took from the Bush White House is that you have to get along with everyone,鈥 she adds.听听
Today, Andrews continues to seek that center. Part of her work is advocating for climate change with Republicans and, last November, she was one of the Bush officials who signed the Statement by Former Republican National Security Officials for Biden (NatSecforBiden.com). 鈥淸In politics] you have to seek the middle ground.鈥澨
Connecting Passions and Disciplines to Effect Change听
While naming factors that place Hollins among the nation鈥檚 most politically active student bodies, Chenette shares a quality not often described in admission material. 鈥淭he moxie of Hollins students is unparalleled, but they also deliver on substance,鈥 adds Chenette, who serves as pro bono general counsel for Reconstructing Hope, a nonprofit providing victims of relationship violence with surgery to remove signs of prior violence. Relationship violence was the cause that sparked Chenette鈥檚 passion at Hollins. A political science and gender and women鈥檚 studies major, Chenette was a campus counselor and chair of the Coalition Against Sexual Assault.听听
鈥淗ollins taught me that change can come from within systems and from outside of those systems,鈥 Chenette says. 鈥淧olitics is inherently interdisciplinary, making Hollins leaders and problem solvers uniquely qualified to effectuate change with a liberal arts education.鈥澨

Davis
Mollie Davis 鈥22 came to Hollins deeply passionate and vocal about one cause: gun reform. She also has a title鈥攕chool-shooting survivor鈥攖hat commands attention when she speaks on campus and nationally as a recognized gun-
reform activist.听听
On March 20, 2018, Davis was sitting in math class in Great Mills High School in southern Maryland when she heard students screaming in the hallway. One of her classmates had just shot his ex-girlfriend (she later died at the hospital) and wounded a bystander before shooting himself in the hallway. Ironically, five days earlier, Davis had organized a peaceful school walkout with 250 classmates to bring attention to gun reform.听
鈥淭he shooting made me angry,鈥 Davis says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so frustrating that this continues to occur in this country. Sharing my personal story makes me feel that the terrible thing my community went through can be used to change things.鈥澨
As she wrote in The Nation in February 2019, 鈥淢arch 20 lit a spark in me that will never fade away.鈥 At Hollins, she is honing her advocacy skills and exploring other disciplines to express her voice.听听
A double major in political science and theatre, Davis is a playwright deeply influenced by the works of Larry Kramer, pioneering AIDS activist and writer. 鈥淭heatre is important to the human condition, and there are so many things it impacts,鈥 she says. In addition to her powerful essays about gun reform for national publications and her speeches at rallies and for campus voter registration drives, Davis has started three different versions of a play about a school shooting. 鈥淚t鈥檚 far from finished,鈥 she says, a comment that also speaks to her post-Hollins political career plans.听听
Politics at Hollins, Chenette adds, flourishes in the many academic intersections and personal opportunities that Hollins students can explore: 鈥淚t鈥檚 not only about making change but seeing political possibilities everywhere, from science and public health to art-making and theatre.鈥澨

Jdid
Maria Jdid 鈥21 intends to become a neurosurgeon, but her double major鈥攊nternational studies and biochemistry鈥
speaks to her global perspective. Her family moved from her home country of Syria when she was a toddler and settled in Saudi Arabia, where Hollins caught her eye for its very active Model UN Club鈥擩did co-founded her high school鈥檚 Model UN Club鈥攁nd for its single-sex environment. 鈥淚 wanted to be in a place that kept my voice and strengthened it,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚 come from a minority sect of Islam, which was condemned in Saudi Arabia,鈥 she adds. 鈥淚 had to hide my identity. When I first came to the U.S., Hollins was the reason I got comfortable identifying as Arab.鈥澨
Her ability to cross disciplines and to 鈥渢hink beyond the lab鈥 proved beneficial during her 2019 Summer Term and J-Term 2020 internship at NYU Langone Health researching acute lymphoid leukemia: 鈥淚t was eye-opening that the Hollins skill set really helped me excel.鈥澨
Pre-COVID-19, she led talks to increase campus awareness of the Arab world and on issues between Palestine and Israel. On April 17, 2019, Syria Independence Day, with the help of her Hollins Model UN friends, she led a fundraiser and presented a poster on the war in Syria.听
鈥淚t meant a lot to me to see the entire team come together,鈥 Jdid, who was copresident of Hollins Model UN, reflects. 鈥淣ot everyone in Model UN is a liberal, but everyone is extra-politically driven. Our views are always to help each other confront situations through different ways.鈥 Hollins annually hosts the Model UN Model Arab League Team (this year, virtually), and Jdid has attended the national conference sponsored by the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations.听听
Because of the pandemic, she plans to work in a hospital for a year before applying to medical school. Her plan? Become a doctor and work for a U.S. institution that sends doctors abroad to help underserved populations. 鈥淧olitical activism is individually driven but goes beyond your interests,鈥 says Jdid, who hopes to return to Syria one day. 鈥淚t鈥檚 less focused on goals and more on progress and the journey to enact change.鈥澨
The journey for Monica Huegel 鈥09, a campaign researcher for various candidates including Hillary Clinton鈥檚 presidential bid in 2016, began her first semester when she joined the College Democrats. 鈥淲e were a small, scrappy group that volunteered for Roanoke-area campaigns,鈥 she explains.听听

Huegel
She knocked on doors and manned phone banks, activities that weren鈥檛 the easiest fit for the self-described introvert. What came naturally was the comparative research she conducted on candidates in early voting states as an intern at EMILY鈥檚 List in Washington, D.C., the political action committee to increase the number of pro-choice female candidates, which was founded by Ellen Malcolm 鈥69.听
After earning her M.A. in political science from American University, American Bridge, a political action committee, hired Huegel, which led to jobs doing research for various campaigns. 鈥淩esearch in the political world gets a reputation for mudslinging, but we look at policy and if a candidate鈥檚 voting record matches the rhetoric,鈥 Huegel explains. 鈥淲e vet donors, speakers, and campaign surrogates.鈥澨
After Clinton鈥檚 loss in 2016, Huegel took some time off before looking for a research position not tied to the mercurial cycle of a political campaign. She now conducts strategic analysis for the research firm IMS, Inc.听
Fostering Community through Politics听
Laura Smith 鈥88, chief of staff for Pennsylvania State Representative Todd Stephens, laughs that working in politics was never on her career radar. After graduation, Smith, a sociology major, worked for a computer software company in South Carolina until 2003, when her father鈥檚 terminal illness brought her home to Lansdale, Pennsylvania鈥攁nd what has become a rewarding career in the state legislature and as an elected official.听听

Smith
Smith, who is in her second term as one of five elected board members and vice chair of the Towamencin Township Council, sees her political career as public service and the confluence of her problem-solving prowess and her love for her hometown.听
鈥淎fter my dad died, I needed a job,鈥 Smith explains. A friend was the recorder of deeds for Montgomery County (near Philadelphia) and needed someone to make inroads in the community. 鈥淚 am the Queen of Connect-the-Dots,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 made a point of meeting everyone.鈥澨
Her networking expertise led to administrative jobs for different Pennsylvania state representatives and a love for helping constituents. 鈥淚 love it when I can fix an issue for someone,鈥 Smith says. 鈥淥nce, a father came into our office in tears. He needed a waiver for an independent living placement for his son, who was severely autistic. These waivers are hard to come by, but I realized that the issue was about keeping his family intact. We made the case to the Department of Human Services and got the waiver that changed their lives.鈥澨
Her second campaign in 2019 was challenging. 鈥淚t was interesting running as a Republican,鈥 Smith says. 鈥淧eople told me that they couldn鈥檛 vote for me because of Trump, but I explained that at the local level, it鈥檚 about managing services and tax dollars for infrastructure, first responders, parks鈥攁ll the things that make our township such a great place. In my job and on the council, I teach civics. I educate people every day on the difference between local, state, and federal government.鈥澨
She鈥檚 found her niche as a 鈥渟enior whisperer,鈥 she says, taking great satisfaction in helping retired constituents solve problems, from tax issues to demystifying technology. Smith, like every alumna interviewed for this article, lauds Hollins for helping her find her voice: 鈥淚鈥檓 not afraid to stand up and say something. My experience was empowering, and I learned that I could do what I set my mind to.鈥澨
Huegel, too, credits Hollins鈥 size for helping her find and use her voice. 鈥淗ollins is a small community, so you need more voices to speak up. You could build coalitions.鈥 At Hollins, Huegel served as president of the College Democrats. 鈥淭he president and vice president of the College Republicans were also political science majors [with me], and we combined our efforts on voter registration drives.鈥澨
Creating Change听
鈥淗ollins taught me that change can be transformative and transgressive: it can look like advocacy within existing systems like lawmaking and lawyering, but it can also come from the outside, through demonstrating, innovating alternatives, creating art, developing research, galvanizing community, and educating,鈥 notes Chenette. 鈥淗ollins students are among the most politically active because they see the opportunity to make change both in systems and beyond them. They see political possibility everywhere.鈥澨

Hale
Those possibilities began in high school for Rev. Dr. Cynthia Hale 鈥75 when she and the late Rev. Alvord Beardslee, emeritus professor of religion and former chaplain, volunteered together on Roanoke鈥檚 National Council of Christians and Jews and attended an antiracism conference together before she enrolled at Hollins. 鈥淗e was recruiting me for Hollins, but I realize now that he was recruiting me to ministry,鈥 says Hale, a Roanoke native who has been a Hollins trustee for the past decade.听听
She immediately became involved in the Religious Life Association at Hollins, chose a music major, and became a vocal voice for change on campus. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 go to Hollins to be politically active, but the crisis of the moment pushed us there鈥t was Black power, white power, Kent State, women鈥檚 power,鈥 she explains. 鈥淚 think we were more active then, [though] there鈥檚 always been a core group at Hollins who are activists.鈥澨
鈥淚t was a racist place, which was part of that time,鈥 explains Hale, who founded Ray of Hope Christian Church in Decatur, Georgia, serves as senior pastor, and works for numerous social justice issues. 鈥淚 vowed to change Hollins and thought I was going to eliminate racism by graduation. It wasn鈥檛 eliminated, but I kept going. I鈥檓 still going.鈥澨
鈥淢y activism was born of the fact that we find courage at Hollins to do what we need to do. Women have that [spark] in them, but Hollins flames the fire,鈥 Hale adds. 鈥淭he faculty wouldn鈥檛 allow us to say, 鈥榃e can鈥檛 do this.鈥欌澨
Her c.v. is a primer on how to create change across communities. Hale created two nationally recognized pastoral development ministries, Elah Pastoral Ministries and Women in Ministry Conference. Among her numerous national awards is Ebony Magazine鈥檚 鈥淧ower 100鈥 list of the nation鈥檚 most influential Black leaders, and in 2009 President Barack Obama appointed her to the President鈥檚 Commission on White House Fellowships. For the 2016 Democratic National Convention, Hale served on the Platform Committee and delivered the Invocation at the Convention. For President Biden鈥檚 Inauguration, she led one of the prayers during the Inaugural Prayer Service at the National Cathedral.听
Hale is an optimistic realist: 鈥淐hange is slow鈥攅xternal change is one thing, but internal change allows diverse groups to work together.鈥 She proudly cites Hollins鈥 first president of color, Mary Dana Hinton, Ph.D., a selection for which Hale served on the search committee.听听
By providing such visible opportunities to work together, from presidential search committees to Zoom conferences about real-life ballot recounts and healthy, respectful (and, yes, sometimes heated), political dialogue, Hollins, Chenette says, shows students how to make change sustainable: 鈥淭elling people that they are wrong and you are right is rarely the most convincing argument. Humanizing politics, remembering it鈥檚 about people, inspires diverse perspectives.鈥澨
鈥淚t鈥檚 easy to feel you don鈥檛 have a voice when you are young, but getting involved in politics [at Hollins] does help you see how that voice gets channeled,鈥 Huegel adds. 鈥淵ou learn that compromise is how things get built, and sometimes there are things that are hard to compromise on, but we have a dynamic system, and we can keep creating change.鈥澨
Sarah Achenbach is a freelance writer living in Baltimore.听
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