Tuesday, March 22, 2022
The Student Peace Awards of Fairfax County was begun in 2006 to encourage everyone to think more about peace as both a means and an end, and to recognize young people who work as peacemakers.
The program started with one school (Herndon High School) and one sponsor (Herndon Friends Meeting) and gradually expanded from there. In 2013, for the first time, it was offered to every public high school in Fairfax County. Two private schools are also included. There are currently nineteen sponsoring organizations, listed at the end.
Peacemaking is vital in our world, and students active in the pursuit of peace should be encouraged in every way possible. The sponsors, family, and friends celebrate the accomplishments of the recipients at a public reception in early March. The award consists of a monetary gift for each recipient and for a peace-focused charity of his or her choice, and a framed certificate, generally presented at each participating school’s annual awards ceremony.
A reception to recognize the student winners was on Sunday, March 13, 2022 at Sherwood Community Center, 3740 Old Lee Highway, Fairfax.
2022 Recipients of the Student Peace Awards of Fairfax County
Jewel Coulter, Senior
Annandale High School
Jewel Coulter has volunteered for the National Korean American Service & Education Consortium (NAKASEC) which organizes Korean and Asian Americans to achieve social, economic, and racial justice. She also partnered with 2021 Peace Awards recipient Jimmy Lee to create the Annandale High School Equity Team. She has served as a Student Equity Ambassador Leader for the school division, working with students across Fairfax County to increase equity in schools. The equity team that they had established at Annandale was replicated across the division.
STAR - Students Together Assisting Refugees
Centreville HS
The Centreville HS chapter of STAR (Students Together Assisting Refugees) is dedicated to "helping refugees realize happy and successful lives in their newly adopted communities." The students have been raising money to purchase welcome packages for refugees coming to the greater metropolitan area. Other activities include a winter coat drive, a talent show fundraiser, and “Letters of Hope” postcards written to overseas refugees. As part of their effort to raise awareness of what it means to be a refugee, they plan to invite refugees to come and speak with students, share their experiences, and answer student questions.
Zilala Mamat, Senior
Chantilly High School
Zilala Mamat’s extended family has suffered under China’s policy of human rights abuses directed at Uyghur people. As a freshman, Zilala organized and led an optional assembly to educate students, who were shocked to learn that in this day and age, people were being sent to concentration camps in other parts of the world. As a sophomore, Zilala founded a human rights club at Chantilly High School that promotes activism and education on human rights issues. Outside of school, Zilala founded a non-profit, United Uyghur Youth (UUY), to spread awareness about the Uyghur human rights crisis, preserving Uyghur culture and empowering Uyghur youth. She has organized several demonstrations and protests about human rights abuses and has also organized and raised more than $1,500 for UUY through a T-shirt campaign to fund future demonstrations and protests.
Rania Ali, Senior
Edison High School
Rania Ali has raised money for and worked at the Khartoum Cheshire Home, a rehabilitation center for disabled children in Sudan. She updated and translated the Home’s website into Arabic to help members of the Sudanese community access the information. Rania is an active member of Edison’s Black Student Union and the Student Muslim Association. Last December she joined other Fairfax County Public School students at Edison High School in One Fairfax, a peaceful protest to call attention to an incident of Islamophobia at another area high school.
Alin Freitag, Senior
Fairfax High School
Alin Freitag was nominated last year to represent his school in a new county program called Student Equity Ambassador Leaders (SEALs). He believes that one of the best ways to promote peace and show respect for the gender and relationship choices of fellow students is by the day-to-day use of their self-selected inclusive pronouns – such as he, him, she, her, they and their. He designed a simple, short form for use in school that included prompts to indicate a student’s pronoun preferences. He shared the newly designed form with a handful of teachers, who adapted it to their needs and began using it in their classes. By the start of this school year, the form was successfully included in teachers’ beginning of the year forms for his school. Students report feeling encouraged to see it widely used in many of their classes.
Maya Yona, Senior
Ryan Kiefer, Senior
Hayfield Secondary School
Maya Yonas and Ryan Kiefer responded to pandemic-related stress among students by creating a Guided Meditation Group for Hayfield. The group has continued to meet online and as of February of this year had thirty-two participants, including four faculty members. Maya and Ryan both believe that meditation helps achieve peace by promoting mindfulness and clearing the mind to allow for self-reflection and thoughts to be processed in a more positive and healthy manner. They believe those benefits don’t stop when the meditation session is over, and that by adopting a more peaceful lifestyle, people will spread that inner peace throughout their community.
Justin Tetelman, Senior
Justice High School
Justice High School is one of six schools in Fairfax County Public Schools to implement the Restorative Justice Community Schools program. Because of Justin's advocacy, Justice is the only school in the county to launch a student-led youth pilot program. Justin serves as the lead student restorative ambassador. In this role, he facilitates student-led restorative circles within classrooms. Justin also has advocated for gender equity, economic accessibility and increased diversity within the athletics department, mentors other students, and is an active member of the Fairfax County Human Rights Commission.
DEEMA OSMAN, Junior
King Abdullah Academy
Deena Osman is the current CEO of LeadPeace, a NOVA student-led organization with the mission to cultivate youth leaders and peacebuilders. LeadPeace sponsors online lectures and workshops through which students can learn from leaders in the fields of peacemaking, peacekeeping, and conflict resolution. In June of 2020, LeadPeace held a virtual community dialog to examine systemic racism, institutionalized racism, and the Black Lives Matter Movement. Since joining LeadPeace, Deema has mentored six KAA students to become members of the LeadPeace team and encouraged fellow students to learn leadership and peace building skills as well as conflict resolution to support peace within their own communities. A video about their work can be seen on YouTube.
Bethel Tessera, Senior
Lake Braddock Secondary School
Bethel Tessera took training through Dosomething.org, a non-profit that supports young people engaging in volunteer, social change, and civil action campaigns. With another student, she devised a campaign they called “It’s (Not) All In Your Head.” to encourage high school students to seek help for mental health problems and to decrease stigma around this issue. They started with the idea that students are more likely to access resources if access is easy. Her team’s work was developed into an on-line flyer that was downloaded 4,846 times by students across the nation. Bethel also co-wrote a paper detailing the challenges facing prisoners with mental illness, advocating for increased mental health awareness and intervention for those incarcerated, and sent it to her state Senator.
Caroline Martell, Junior
Langley High School
During her freshman year, Caroline Martell took training on advocacy through Team ENOUGH, a national youth organization dedicated to ending gun violence. She has lobbied members of Congress and the state legislature as well as a presidential candidate. She started a chapter at Langley High School of March For Our Lives, the student-led group initiated after Parkland in support of gun violence prevention legislation. She collaborated with her former Civics teacher at Cooper Middle School to develop advocacy training webinars, and she is currently working on organizing a Langley High School club to educate students about activism.
UNICEF Club
John R. Lewis High School
The Lewis High School UNICEF Club supports education, advocacy, and events centered on a broad range of issues including climate change, mental health awareness, women’s empowerment, people with disabilities, and much more. Club meetings include planned activities, video presentations, discussions, or Q&As with a different biweekly focus. In response to the stresses of online learning, they initiated a “sticky note” project, writing positive messages to teachers and to other students. They worked with the Key Club to hold a mug decorating contest and fundraiser for UNICEF’s Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Project. The club also set up a conference with the Lewis Muslim Student Association on the oppression of Muslims in the United States and abroad.
Junior Civitan Club
Madison High School
Madison’s Junior Civitan Club is associated with the national Junior Civitan International, which supports people with disabilities. In past years this has primarily entailed sending cards and gift baskets to VA hospitals and nursing homes. This year the club collected needed items for Afghan refugees. They found local businesses willing to house their donation bins and created posters to encourage all Madison students to participate. The effort was a success, and they were able to donate many necessities to Afghan refugees in the area. The club is currently working with other Madison High School clubs to participate in Project Linus, a national organization that makes blankets for ill, traumatized, and displaced children.
Maya Kanaan, Senior
George C. Marshall High School
Maya started the Peace in the Middle East club at Marshall High School her sophomore year. Now with about 30 members of many ethnicities, the Peace in the Middle East club meets regularly to learn about a variety of Middle Eastern countries. Maya prepares informational slideshows on each country, focusing on how conflict there is affecting children’s lives. Recently, the club obtained the sponsorship of a local restaurant to help raise money for children in Lebanon. They were able to provide five teachers with remote-learning supplies, increasing access to quality education. This past fall, they raised money for Afghani children’s school supplies, distributing the money through the Save the Children Fund. The club is planning additional fundraising activities for this spring.
Olivia Zhang, Junior
McLean High School
Olivia Zhang is the founder and CEO of the non-profit organization, Cancer Kids First which has thousands of volunteers in chapters around the world sending toys, books and care packages to over 50 pediatric hospitals. Olivia heads the management team with oversight over matters such as planning, policy, and finance. She manages their website which includes milestones of achievement, awards and a variety of events including virtual movies, speakers, volunteer team building, and fund raisers. Olivia is also the president of McLean’s Student Government Association, where she launched the Be a Good Neighbor Initiative -- monthly service events such as a toy drive, a blood drive, and writing letters to the elderly.
Ava Belmont, Senior
Mount Vernon High School
As president of the Our Minds Matter Teen Advisory and of Mount Vernon High School’s Our Minds Matter Club, Ava Belmont helps raise awareness of mental health issues. She leads meetings to discuss mental wellness, organizes awareness months, creates videos to decrease stigma around mental illness, and works to create an open dialogue regarding mental health at the school. She recently receive a grant to fund a wellness room at Mount Vernon HS to create a safe space for students to relax and take a break during the day. Ava also serves as a representative with the Fairfax County Public Schools Student-Led Mental Health Working G and has advocated for greater virtual support in schools for children and adolescents seeking mental health support.
Tariq Aldalou, Senior
Mountain View Alternative High School
The war in Syria led Tariq Aldalou to move to Lebanon, where he worked as a volunteer teacher and administrator for LOYAC, a nonprofit organization that designs and develops programs which help support underprivileged and vulnerable communities. When Tariq started working for LOYAC, he packed and delivered food boxes to people living in refugee camps. After 2 months, he started teaching math to young students. This led to additional classes teaching Arabic and English, not just to children but also to their parents, developing curricula for varying age groups. He also worked with adults to help develop their business skills. At Mountain View, Tariq voices his concerns for human rights by publishing in the school newspaper, The Mirror. Topics he has written about include water scarcity, education for all, and terrorism around the world.
Sara Boddie, Senior
Oakton High School
Sara Boddie founded a social justice club called “Be the Change” to create an environment for Oakton students to talk about topical issues of interest and inspire them to become community leaders and activists. The club began hosting regular meetings to discuss a variety of issues including the prison industry complex, LGBTQ rights, climate change, and racism within existing institutions such as school systems and the health care field. They also organized a food drive and collected clothing for the needy. Sara attended a local protest in Vienna and delivered a speech to 200 people that day. She spoke about the stereotyping of young Black children and what she and her brothers experienced as African Americans, knowing that she doesn’t want these things to happen to her own children in the future.
Owen (Vivian) Fuchs-Dubuque, Senior
Quander Road School
Owen Fuchs-Dubuque is a member of Quander Road’s service club, Blossoming Beauties. She assisted with clothing and food drives, toy collections, hurricane relief, and their annual Thanksgiving outreaches. She is also the lead in the EFE (Education for Employment) Road Café. She keeps their books, ensures that appropriate inventory is maintained, and keeps the Café clean and sanitized. The goal of the Road Café is to teach students good work ethics and to provide them with job skills to enable them to earn internships at local businesses. As an active member of the LGBTQ+ community, she makes it a point to accept others. She is currently completing an internship at an animal hospital and has rescued many animals.
Andrea Agola, Senior
Robinson Secondary School
Andre Agola founded a club at Robinson called R.E.A.D. (Representation in English Allows for Dialogue), whose mission is “to collaborate with English teachers to increase POC (person of color) representation in the English curriculum.” The club’s intention is to cultivate awareness of the importance of diversity and inclusion in education, and to inspire new perspectives on social issues and the experiences faced by the POC community. Andrea also helped organize a Fairfax County chapter of Diversify Our Narrative, a national non-profit organization that seeks to address the imbalances of materials taught in schools, especially in the areas of racial justice and history. Andrea started sharing her creative ideas before entering high school with an ongoing blog, Our Lives, A Different Kind of Crochet. The blog discusses culture, biographical stories and the African Diaspora, and includes her award-winning poem, “Prolific.”
Niyat Asefaw, Senior
South County High School
Niyat Asefew volunteered at Amen Charitable Organization in Ethiopia, teaching math, physics, and English to grade school children at an orphanage in Ethiopia. She believes strongly in civic action to address economic, social and gender inequalities and discrimination, particularly concerning women, the elderly and refugees. She broadcasts her own sit-down talk show, “The Candid Hour,” where she addresses and tackles uncomfortable topics within the Ethiopian community and the world. She also has been actively involved in the Model UN program at South County and became Secretary-General of the club in her junior year.
Damilola Awofisayo and Christopher Arraya, Seniors
Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology
Damilola Awofisayo and Christopher Arraya are active members of the Student Equity Coalition, a student organization whose mission is to affirm, empower and elevate the diversity of TJ’s school community. The Student Equity Coalition provides a forum for students to discuss issues, see other perspectives, and provide a voice for under-represented groups while creating a closer-knit community among students whose families come from different countries, cultures and religious backgrounds.
Christopher is also the co-president of the Hispanic Community Club through which he created “Minority Mentors.” Through podcasts and interviews, Christopher also advocates for Hispanic equity across Virginia.
As president of TJ’s Black Student Union, Damilola guided its members to join the Minority Mentors Program alongside Hispanic Community Club members. This fostered cooperation between the two groups because they had similar goals: for upperclassmen to provide support to younger students. Damilola also represents TJ as one of Fairfax County’s Student Equity Ambassador Leaders.
Loza Markos, Junior
West Potomac High School
Loza Markos raised money for gift packages for Ethiopian students with disabilities and volunteered last year at a hospital in Addis Ababa to assist and teach children with chronic disabilities and illnesses. She also served at a school for children with Autism Spectrum Disorders, teaching math and English and assuring their access to clean water by purchasing and delivering bottled water to the students and their families. Her homeroom teacher, Allyn Howe, noted that “Loza’s work in teaching and charity in both Ethiopia and in the Alexandria area reflect her generosity and eagerness to improve the lives of those around her.”
Vy Nguyen, Junior
W.T. Woodson High School
As a former Miss Northern Virginia Teen USA, Vy Nguyen volunteered for One Love Foundation, an organization that empowers young people from all backgrounds with the knowledge to identify and avoid abusive relationships. Vy has served as a Teen Ambassador, Workshop Facilitator, and Regional Social Media Team Leader. She has spoken on many panels and served on One Love's Film Fellowship Youth Council, which selects recipients of grants to create feature films on relationship abuse for classroom use. Vy is determined to help others avoid or, if necessary, surmount relationship abuse.
Sponsoring Organizations:
Accotink Unitarian Universalist Church, Burke Alexandria Friends Meeting
Alexandria South Rotary Club
All Dulles Area Muslim Society, Sterling
First Church of Christ, Scientist, Fairfax
George Mason University, Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution Herndon Friends Meeting
Holy Cross Lutheran Church, Herndon
Langley Hill Friends Meeting, McLean
Northern Virginia Hebrew Congregation, Reston Rotary Club of Annandale
Rotary Club of Reston
St. John Neumann Catholic Church, Reston
First Church of Christ, Scientist, Fairfax
George Mason University, Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter
School for Conflict Analysis and Resolution Herndon Friends Meeting
Holy Cross Lutheran Church, Herndon
Langley Hill Friends Meeting, McLean
Northern Virginia Hebrew Congregation, Reston Rotary Club of Annandale
Rotary Club of Reston
St. John Neumann Catholic Church, Reston
St. Mark Catholic Church, Vienna
Stewart R. Mott Foundation, Washington, D.C. United Christian Parish of Reston