Anna Del Castillo, a bilingual master of divinity candidate at Harvard Divinity School, worked with the Faith Matters Network in Tennessee. After a mentor told her about the organization’s Movement Chaplaincy Project, she recognized that it aligned well with her interest in the intersection between faith, spirituality, social justice, and community organizing.

Del Castillo reviewed the program’s curriculum, a 12-week online course focused on teaching skills and content to people who provide spiritual and emotional support to organizations. She also traveled to Tijuana, Mexico, where she volunteered in refugee facilities on the southern U.S. border, providing emotional support to asylum seekers and hearing their stories.

ROTC cadet Will Penzer ’21 also spent his summer helping people in adverse circumstances. As an executive intern for Team Rubicon, a nonprofit that deploys emergency response teams of veterans to disaster areas, he learned about coordinating, organizing, and funding disaster relief efforts around the world.

“I looked at Team Rubicon specifically because I knew that the service was important,” Penzer said. “They were able to give me a really good sense of what lessons they took from the military that work in their nonprofit world, and what things have they realized through work in the nonprofit space that don’t work so well.”

D Dangaran, a student at Harvard Law School, worked at both the ACLU LGBT & HIV Project and the Sylvia Rivera Law Project, both in New York.

“Most people split between a law firm and public interest — splitting between two public interests is risky,” Dangaran said, as many of the latter do not compensate interns. “But this fellowship allowed me to spend more weeks in New York that otherwise I wouldn’t have been able to.”

Speaking to the positive impact of each fellow’s work, Bacow said, “It’s why I think service is important,” He added, “It’s why I think each of us needs to find ways that we can make the world a better place, and it’s why our office is so privileged and honored to be able to support this program.”