IM -ensaai 1621 // Th StatementS Wednesday, April 5B It's an old adage : When you get to the top, don't forget the little people. Student director and LSA senior Zain- eb Abdul-Nabi has already found her footing in film, but she certainly hasn't forgotten the little people along the way. As a Screen Arts and Culture major, Abdul-Nabi applied and won the chance to join "Team Oscar" last fall, part of which included presenting Oscar stat- uettes to celebrities during the 2014 Academy Awards. While it's easy to get caught up in the glamour of being at a show like the Oscar's, Abdul-Nabi's SAC background kept her grounded in what she values most: the inner work- ings backstage. "I just love knowing what's going on behind the scenes, because what you see on TV is always very put together," Abdul-Nabi said. "So it was really inter- esting just to see how everyone collabo- rates together backstage." Humility and thoughtfulness: words that embody Zaineb and her philoso- phy toward film. Born in the Bronx as the youngest of four siblings, she pushed outside of the family's comfort zone by leaving New York and coming to the University on an engineering scholarship. She wanted to be a doctor, so she decided to pursue biomedical engineering. But when her Engineer- ing classes proved to be less fulfilling than she hoped, she took a SAC class on a whim. "I took SAC 236, which is an intro- ductory film course, and I loved it," Abdul-Nabi said. "It was one of the first classes in my college career that, yeah, I had to stay up late writing papers, but it still was worth it and I still enjoyed staying up late to write those papers." She made the dramatic shift from engineering to SAC, crediting her fam- ily's habit of watching old foreign films together as the catalyst for her interest. "I always loved watching (old films), and now I'm learning how to make them." At the University Abdul-Nabi was involved with both the Muslim Stu- dents Association and Students Allied for Freedom and Equality - an activ- ist group at the center of the UMDivest Movement. She worked with MSA to develop a media system in which their lectures and events could be viewed online, making the issues they discuss accessible to more than just Michigan students. Though she hasn't had many oppor- tunities to make her own films yet, Abdul-Nabi strives to focus on simple examples of humanity rather than over-the-top production, once again remembering the little people, the ones backstage or behind the scenes. To apply for the "Team Oscar," she has to submit a short film and essay. For her film she went to Eastern Market in Detroit, filming people's faces and then focusing in on their hands, illus- trating the depth that can be found in people's everyday activities. The film wasn't about the "hands" themselves, but about the stories that were carried in the hands. "They didn't talk about their hands," Abdul-Nabi said. "But it's just about the way we connect people to their hands and what hands can tell us about a per- son." As she begins envisioning her future after her time at the University, Abdul- Nabi values discovering an area of pas- sion within the film industry - though she admits with a laugh that her first goal is just "surviving." "I really hope I can find something that I'm passionate about in the film industry and not just take the job just because it's going to pay a bill or some- thing," she said. "I don't want it to just be a weird job here and there - I hope that they kind of affirm my love of the regular people, the everyday kind of people." TRACY KO/Daily B Y U A LI E G AD B OIS As a child, Music, Theatre & Dance senior Mary Naoum was singing and dancing before she could create coherent sentences, much to the entertainment of her older siblings who encouraged her with piano accompaniment. With her long-running love of performing and the arts, Naoum came to the University not to pursue her own path to stardom, but to learn how her craft could be used to empower others and affect change in communities. Naoum will receive a B.A. in Theatre Arts with a concentration in Performing Arts Man- agement and a minor inCommunity Action and Social Change (CASC) in May. Her aca- demic career has been a fusion of arts and social justice, but she is quick to say that most of her learning and inspiration has come out- side the classroom. After volunteering with Detroit Partner- ship her freshman year, Naoum sought out an internship with Motor City Lyric Opera, a nonprofit arts organization in Detroit. She also volunteered with its Opera on Wheels program, which brings an operatic produc- tion to different elementary schools in the city. Naoum said the experience made her rec- ognize the potential of art in education. "Whoa, opera's great, music is great, but what I really like is the positive impact it has on these students and the empowering pro- cess," she said. Excited by this type of work, Naoum moved on to the Prison Creative Arts Project with English Prof. Buzz Alexander. The class produced a play with young men in juvenile detention. Naoum singlehandedly brought one young man from a hangdog refuser in the corner to a full-on participant who now and dreams of an acting career. "That's when I really realized I'm not just doing this for fun, combining 'social justice' and 'theatre,'" Noaum said. "The combination of those two things is actually incredibly pow- erful." Naoum involved herself with Michigan Per- formance Outreach Workshop (MPOW) from its inception. MPOW is a student organization that holds a free field trip event on campus for Detroit public school students and has an out- reach Shakespeare puppet troupe for younger students, among other things. "We do improv, a capella, dance, beat mak- ing - all different kinds of creative expres- sion," Naoum said. "It's challenging because in schools you're constantly having to put information into your head and you're not challenged to think for yourself. It's an oppor- tunity to say to the kids: this is all you, nothing you're going to do is wrong, and everything you're doing is creative and original." Tireless and eager to do more, Naoum worked for Matrix Theatre Company, atcom- munity empowerment theatre in southwest Detroit. Participating in marches and com- munity events, Matrix brings its giant, beauti- ful puppets ofleaders in civil rights, disability rights and other movements to teach people about their history and brave leaders. Their education program focuses on a social theme, such as environmental justice, teaching the kids about the issue, and then facilitating the children's creation and production of original plays centered on it. "It's this awesome fusion of learning about social justice issues and then also beingsocial justice through having the kids be in charge of creating these plays empowering them- selves around these issues that they just learned about, and then performing them," she said. Citing Kendrick Lamar's "Good Kid, Bad City" as a perfect example of using artis- tic expression to incite open-mindedness, Naoum explained why the arts can be a pow- erful tool for social change. "Here's a Black artist using hip-hop music to transform people's beliefs and understand- ings of growing up in a low-income urban area. Not by literally preaching: 'stop doing drugs and stop stealing, be better.' He tells a narrative that embodies his own coming of age ... that can be shared with others to help them transform their existence." After graduation, Naoum will take a year to live and work in Detroit, and then head to a masters program at the School of Social Work. Naoum shares some advice for under- grads: "Get involved in organizations. My advice for everything is just to listen. Listen to the people you're working with. What they want and think. It's never about you - well I guess in some regards its about both of you; it's about getting everybody involved." out of the University's total student popu- experience in both CSG and LSA student lation - possess a specific set of concerns government, has spent two years on the that are often overlooked, such as diffi- University's Model United Nations team culty finding housing, challenges in sched- and is aresidential adviser atOxford house. uling classes and being forced to adapt to Identifying as openly gay and a first- new academic styles. generation college student, Mesman said Mesman added that students transfer the University has exposed him to a wide for a variety of reasons - grades, finances range of different identities, which he and location among others- and hail from embraces in his work with CSG and Res- campus. "My greatest advice would be to try something that you couldn't dobefore, just go completely out of your comfort zone,"he said. "If it's something that you even have the faintestdesire to do, just try it and see how it goes.