Mohammed Saffouri
Film and Video Studies
Life hasn鈥檛 slowed down for graduating major Mohammed Saffouri since he completed his 鈥淭he First.鈥
鈥淭he First,鈥 which Saffouri created for the FAVS 365 Documentary Filmmaking class, follows 24-year-old Libyan American Abrar Omeish as she campaigns for and wins a seat on the Fairfax County School Board in 2019, becoming one of Virginia鈥檚 youngest elected officials and the first Muslim woman on the board.
The documentary garnered Saffouri a prestigious Capital Emmy from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, National Capital Chesapeake Bay Chapter. The accolades didn鈥檛 stop there. The documentary was featured in a number of film festivals, winning the Student Documentary Grand Prize at the March on Washington Film Festival and the Best Short Documentary at Georgia鈥檚 Broad Street Film Fest.
Saffouri has spent the past year and half preparing for and making his senior film, which is currently in post-production. The narrative film is based on his grandfather鈥檚 experiences as a young soccer player who makes the national team just as his family is forced to emigrate from his native Palestine.
The film, titled 鈥淭ouchline,鈥 was shot in Jordan last summer. Saffouri worked with a producer there and said the shoot was a challenging process not only with the pandemic but because it is a period film set in 1948.
鈥淲e had to rent antique cars,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e shot in the cities of Amman and Al-Salt. We used Al-Salt because it looks like Haifa would have in 1948.鈥
The pre-production work for 鈥淭ouchline鈥 was completed at Mason with the help of the Film and Video Studies faculty, he said. Although the pandemic delayed the project, Saffouri said the attention his documentary received definitely made making his senior film easier, especially in terms of raising money for the production.
As the end of his college career approaches, Saffouri is working with film professionals in Qatar, Los Angeles, and Egypt to complete 鈥淭ouchline,鈥 which he plans to enter into a number of international film festivals.
鈥淸鈥淭he First鈥漖 was a requirement for a class,鈥 Saffouri said. 鈥淚 was using it to see how the [film festival] process worked and was surprised by the amount of recognition it received. It definitely was a good way to market myself and helped tell people who I am.鈥
鈥淢ohammed is one of those rare students whose drive and dogged passion for creating films by any means necessary eclipses most,鈥 said filmmaker Nikyatu Jusu, an assistant professor in the Film and Video Studies Program. 鈥淗is desire to create authentic films related to his specific cultural/ethnic existence is necessary within an often-homogeneous canon of cinema. We are all perpetually inspired by his contagious tenacity.鈥
鈥 Colleen Kearney Rich
Trinidad Lara
Anthropology
Trinidad Lara was born in Santiago, Chile, and also lived in Japan and Russia with her family before settling in Newport News, Virginia.
While at Mason she also studied abroad for a year and a half in France. All of those experiences contributed to her major in .
鈥淔or me, I was always an outsider and always looking at society from my particular standpoint,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he experience of growing up and being a bit different and being interested in what was going on in different cultural context, definitely pushed me to wanting to pursue an area of study that helped me to further explore these questions.鈥
A member of Mason鈥檚 , Lara came to the university on the recommendation of a high school advisor and because of its proximity to Washington, D.C. She said she found Mason鈥檚 campuses鈥攖he most diverse among Virginia鈥檚 public research universities鈥攁 rewarding amalgam of ideas.
鈥淟ooking back on the experience, I gained so much,鈥 Lara said. 鈥淚 had great professors. I met some great people, and my experience within my classes, the various perspectives, was so rewarding.鈥
鈥淪he鈥檚 just a joy to be around,鈥 said , assistant dean of the Honors College. 鈥淪he鈥檚 pursued every opportunity available to her at Mason with a wide-open heart and a sense of adventure.鈥
After she graduates in December, Lara said she wants to work in a field related to anthropology, perhaps at a refugee agency with which she is already familiar. With her theater minor, she might even become a playwright as a way to convey what she has discovered in her field of study.
鈥淐ulture, in a way, is a collective performance,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e perform our identities, our roles, so there鈥檚 a lot of connection between the two.鈥
鈥 Damian Cristodero
Fatiha Tabibipour
Government and International Politics
Born in Morocco and raised in Italy, Fatiha Tabibipour said she has been fascinated with politics since she can remember. Coming to the United States as an au pair exchange student in 2014, she later enrolled at 亚洲AV, where she learned about the U.S. Supreme Court, and was inspired anew. 聽
鈥淲hat inspired me is the history of bipartisanship, the history of believing in the law and ruling by the law and the constitution, not by what one administration wants,鈥 she said.
The major said she hopes her degree 鈥渨ill open doors in the NGO world and the government world.鈥 She鈥檚 also considering law school.
鈥淚 want a job that can help me make a difference,鈥 Tabibipour said, 鈥淸particularly] in the U.S. government or regarding human rights.鈥
During her time at Mason, Tabibipour interned with the Arab American Business and Professional Association, helping research and draft communications to support their mission of helping minorities achieve roles in public service.
She also helped code and analyze legislative bills passed by Virginia and Pennsylvania through Mason鈥檚 (OSCAR).
Tabibipour said her OSCAR research was complex and an incredible learning opportunity, as was her entire Mason experience.
鈥淚 love that so many professors are very successful and come from different backgrounds from the Department of State, Department of Defense, or other agencies,鈥 Tabibipour said. 鈥淸The professors] have not just a knowledge of the book, but the knowledge of the real world that many of us in the want to experience.鈥
鈥 Mariam Aburdeineh
Cory Jack
Economics
Cory Jack, who just turned 20, isn鈥檛 about to slow down. After graduating high school in Northern Virginia a year early, he finished his studies at in two-and-a-half years. Jack loaded up on classes during the summer and academic year because he wanted to graduate early.
鈥淚 am ready to assume short-term costs for long-term gains,鈥 Jack said. 鈥淚f I can make it easier for myself down the road by working hard up front, I鈥檇 rather do that.鈥
An major and member of Mason鈥檚 , Jack also managed to find time to intern at the White House, act as an Honors College peer mentor and work for the Madison Coalition, a political advocacy group. In addition, he received the from Mason鈥檚 Jack also has minors in and
Jack plans to go to law school next year. He鈥檚 considering practicing antitrust law, although he鈥檚 also interested in politics or perhaps pursuing a doctorate in economics.
鈥淭here is no doubt that Cory is a very bright and talented student,鈥 said , director of undergraduate programs for the Department in the . 鈥淏ut further, he is able to pair that ability with a high level of intellectual curiosity. I am certain those things will take him far in his career.鈥
鈥 Anna Stolley Perskey
Syed Abbas
Biology, Neuroscience
Syed Abbas鈥 days as an undergraduate student at 亚洲AV and a member of the will soon be over, but his presence on campus will extend far longer.
That鈥檚 because the Arlington, Virginia, native who majored in and has created a legacy for himself after completing an impressive Office of Student Scholarship, Creative Activities, and Research (OSCAR) undergrad research project that saw him help construct neuroscience lab from scratch.
Using the $1,500 they each received for their OSCAR grants, Abbas and classmates Ali Ahmad and Paresha Khan created a fully functional lab, setting up servers and software, putting up microscopes, creating an electronics rack and perfusion system, and connecting the electronic equipment.
鈥淚t鈥檚 going to help people learn after I鈥檓 gone,鈥 Abbas said. 鈥淚鈥檓 not the only one using it. Mason students after me are going to be using it and getting research experience.鈥
Herin, his advisor, called him 鈥渁n invaluable resource.鈥
鈥淗e really helped build the lab from the ground up,鈥 she said.
Abbas鈥 contributions to the community don鈥檛 stop there. In 2019, he founded the nonprofit George Mason Food Assistance Club to help feed the hungry. The organization has more than 100 members.
鈥 John Hollis