Vassar Goes to the Source Over Spring Break
From breathtaking medieval houses of worship in Spain that nurtured three religions to the clear Caribbean waters of Trinidad and Tobago in which microplastics threaten coral biodiversity—students, professors, and alums traveled the globe during Spring Break in search of immersive educational experiences that typify the Vassar ethos of “going to the source.” Along the way, they interacted with local scholars and researchers who shared insights impossible to glean from a distance. Want to follow along on their adventures? Read on!

Photo courtesy of Alexandra Polur Gold ’25
Jewish Studies Travel Seminar in Spain
A diverse group of 22 students immersed themselves in the intersecting cultures of Jewish, Christian, and Muslim Spain during a 14-day trip led by Marc Michael Epstein, Professor of Religion on the Mackie P. Davis and Norman H. Davis Chair and Director of Jewish Studies, with help from Visiting Assistant Professor of Jewish Studies Ági Vető and two other scholars with expertise in the art, culture and history of medieval Iberia. The group explored neighborhoods, artifacts, and architecture spanning antiquity through modernity in 10 different locales—transcending the differences that exist between and among them along the way.
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Epstein said a particularly profound moment occurred when the group was gathered in a synagogue crafted in the Mudejar style (preserving or reviving Muslim design motifs in Christian Spain) that had been transformed into a church during the persecution and expulsion of Spanish Jews. “Surrounded by a now-intimate group of students, who had once been strangers but were now deeply connected, I felt a sense of unity,” Epstein recalled. “Some wore kippot, others fasted for Ramadan in hijabs, and one had just been seen in rapt genuflection at the cathedral. I sang for them in Hebrew the psalm that was inscribed on the Muslim-design-inspired wall in beautiful Hebrew letters, in the melody that would have been used in this very place before the Expulsion. It was an immensely moving experience and embodied the essence of what we strive to achieve with students in Jewish Studies at Vassar.”
“I appreciate the people I have gotten close with over this trip, making new friendships that have lasted beyond our time in Spain,” noted Anisha Azizi ’27. “I especially value the moments of intellectual exchange while engaging with the breathtaking cathedrals and historic neighborhoods. One memorable moment of cultural enrichment was our dinner at Madre Tierra Vegetarian Restaurant in Toledo, where our professors invited a local Sephardic band. The band’s performance blended traditional melodies and themes from Sephardic Jewish music, including songs in Judeo-Arabic, love ballads, and playful songs about cooking, into a warm and intimate evening.”
Earth Science and Environmental Studies in Trinidad and Tobago
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Fourteen students embarked on a 10-day study trip to Trinidad and Tobago led by Chair of Earth Science and Geography Jill Schneiderman and Assistant Professor of Earth Science and Environmental Studies Deon Knights, who hails from the Caribbean twin-island nation. There, the group learned scientific field-research methods as they measured concentrations of microplastics and macroplastics at two beaches in an attempt to evaluate the effects of pollution on coral biodiversity. They also looked at environmental effects of the nation’s fossil fuel industry and immersed themselves in Trinidadian culture—with the help of Knights’ relatives as well as those of Selena Namdeo ’26, whose parents were born there.
A main goal, said Schneiderman, was to avoid “parachute science,” whereby “foreign researchers swoop in, disregard people with on-ground experience, and give little to no credit to local collaborators on published works.”
Said Knights, “What we try to do is integrate ourselves with the work that’s already been done and the culture of the people.” This involved everything from getting to know local foods and customs to building relationships with Trinidadian scientists doing similar work “so that we’re not reinventing the wheel or sort of taking credit for work that’s been done,” he said. “We really tried to leverage what’s been happening already.”
Students described the trip as unforgettable. “This trip was incredibly special to me because it was my first time visiting Trinidad and Tobago, where my family is from,” said Selena Namdeo. “I had the chance to see the houses my parents grew up in and meet relatives I’d never met before, which was deeply fulfilling on a personal level. It was equally enriching academically, as I was able to engage in meaningful, hands-on learning by applying scientific concepts to a place that holds so much personal significance. The experience was both intellectually and culturally transformative; it will stay with me forever.”
The Global Collaborative for the Liberal Arts in Rwanda
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A Vassar delegation of faculty, administrators, and a student attended the annual convening of the Global Collaborative for the Liberal Arts at the University of Global Health Equity (UGHE) in Butaro, Rwanda. Vassar has been building this collaborative, which promotes the liberal arts model of education and the value it confers to students, for several years with three other institutions of higher learning—UGHE, the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Bombay, and the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. The group also attended a medical-education conference taking place in the Rwandan capital of Kigali, where Vassar President Elizabeth Bradley spoke about the importance of integrating the humanities into the study of medicine.
Besides Bradley, the Vassar delegation included Deputy to the President Wesley Dixon; Adjunct Instructor in Science, Technology, and Society Christie VanHorne; Associate Professor of French and Francophone Studies Anne Brancky; and Ingrid Munezero ’28, a Vassar first-year student and Global Collaborative intern from Rwanda whose sister is a medical student at UGHE.
Munezero said that during the course of the week that she was in Rwanda, she gained a new appreciation of the liberal arts model of learning, in which acquiring knowledge is a collaborative process among faculty and students, when she heard UGHE students describe how much they believed it was helping them become better doctors. “People there have seen its impact, and it actually got me to be thankful for the fact that I am myself experiencing a liberal arts education because, at first, I took it for granted,” she said.
At one point, Dixon led a community-building session in which participants shared an experience from childhood that informs how they learn or lead today. “It was so powerful because everyone had incredibly different, particular experiences, but there was a through line of values of empowerment and advocacy and equity and curiosity that ran through everybody’s story,” he said, noting that an appreciation for different perspectives is emblematic of the liberal arts model. “It just touched me that we could all have different backgrounds and experiences and lives but still, in this place, sort of lean on similar themes and ethoses that drive us to do this work.”
Six Vassar students will travel to Rwanda this summer for an interdisciplinary course on water resources, Dixon said.
History and Culture of Vietnam
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The Alumnae/i Association of Vassar College (AAVC) sponsored a trip to Vietnam led by Robert Brigham, Professor of History on the Shirley Ecker Boskey Chair, and his spouse, artist Monica Church. Brigham is a specialist on the history of U.S. foreign policy, particularly the Vietnam War, which ended exactly 50 years ago.
The group of 30, mostly alums and family, spent five days in Hanoi meeting with U.S. embassy staff, exploring historic sites, and viewing art. They then flew to Hue, where the longest urban battle of the war took place. “We retraced my father’s footsteps during the 1968 Tet Offensive in Hue,” noted Brigham. “My father, U.S. Marine Corps Sgt. Bruce Allen Atwell, was a combat photographer and took some of the most iconic shots during the Tet Offensive.” Brigham, who has been using Atwell’s photographs in his courses on Vietnam for many years, only recently learned that the photographer is his biological father and will soon publish a book about this.
The group then drove to Hoi An, an ancient seaside town. The last stop was Saigon, where the group toured the Presidential Palace, the War Remnants Museum, art galleries, the Cu Chi Tunnels, and even the Mekong Delta. They also met with the president of Fulbright University. “It was a magical trip,” said Brigham, “a trip filled with history, art, economics, politics, and culture.”
Vassar Trustee Robyn Field ’86 agreed. “Traveling with Professor Bob Brigham and his wife, artist Monica Church, was incredibly special, as we were treated to so much insight and detailed stories about the history, politics, and culture of Vietnam,” Field said. “We had insider access to places we would never have had the opportunity to see without Bob and Monica and our Vassar connection. Vietnam’s landscape was beautiful, the people were warm and engaging, and the food and culture were amazing. A highlight was sharing in the personal family history and stories of the Vietnam War through Bob’s perspective. And, it is always a pleasure to meet and get to know generations of Vassar alums.”