Friends and family members of Zayan Shamayeen, we unite with renewed purpose and urgency to complete our peer fundraising effort to establish the Zayan Shamayeen Memorial Award Endowment at Emory University. This university-wide award will be administered by the Center for Civic and Community Engagement in Campus Life. This initiative started in 2021 and was honored to make the inaugural recipient, Helena Zeleke, with a one-time interim award funded by Campus Life. As we seek to keep Zayan’s compassion, commitment, drive, passion, and memory alive, we invite you to join us in helping us fund the remaining $10,550. Your support is crucial to ensure we can continue to recognize Emory students who are dreamers, like Zayan, looking to make the world a better place.
The purpose of this award is to commemorate the exceptional qualities which Zayan either possessed or valued during his lifetime, and to recognize those who uplift the spirit of humanity in its many different facets. This award will provide a deserving undergraduate student who embodies these characteristics and values with an opportunity to serve their community and make a larger impact on the greater good.
To be eligible for the scholarship, the student must:
To award the scholarship, the Center for Civic and Community Engagement will:
From an early age, Zayan Shamayeen had a passion for learning and an astute sense of duty to the community, society, and the world he lived in. Observing economic and political disparities in his home country of Bangladesh, Zayan committed his life to learning and searched for opportunities to improve the world around him.
Despite struggling with the daily effects of epilepsy, he left his home and family to study at Emory University (Class of 2018), majoring in Biology and minoring in Economics. Zayan became an outstanding student with considerable compassion for the disadvantaged. Throughout his college career, Zayan conducted research, including a study that examined the impact of family income on health outcomes. In addition to building his knowledge of the life sciences and health care systems, he made numerous contributions to the Emory community. As a founding member and president of the Bengali Association for Students at Emory, he created a community of comfort and acceptance for all, regardless of their affiliation to Bengali culture.