Avi Alpert (2006 - 2007)

United States

Avi Alpert

Avi is from the United States, and graduated with an A.B. from Columbia University. His interest in reconstructing the debate around globalization "as a process that must be confronted and transformed in our daily lives" was provoked by his travels and his interactions with activists, artists, intellectuals, religious leaders, and community leaders in many parts of the world. He has interviewed Zapatista movement leaders in Chiapas, exchanged lectures on Western philosophy for tutorials in Buddhist philosophy with young Tibetan exiles in India, researched the life and times of African-American leader Fr. Paul Washington for a memorial jazz composition, and taught English to Latin American immigrants in Harlem. "Facing Monks," his photo series, won Columbia's 2005 Cross-Cultural Connection Photo Contest. Amongst several other languages, Avi can read classical and modern Tibetan.

As a Sauvé Scholar, Avi researched the history of intercultural contact, and the ways that patterns of thought and culture changed through those contacts. He also began several creative writing projects along these lines. He continued to pursue this dual interest in 2007-2008 as a Helena Rubenstein Fellow at the Whitney Museum of American Art, where he worked with other artists, critics, and curators on a number of projects. Those writings have appeared in Shifter Magazine, Performance Space 122, the Dia Center in Chelsea and a forthcoming piece will be in an exhibit at Third Guangzhou Triennial in China. Those projects were put on hold as he worked as field organizer for the Barack Obama U.S. Presidential campaign in Central Florida until the November election.

Avi worked with Nancy Wright on the language editing of Reflections, Sauvé Scholars 2006-2007.

Country of origin

United States

“Leaders must dream of changing the world.

They must have an inspired vision of the changes they want to make and be prepared to consecrate all
their energy to that purpose. A capacity to communicate their objectives is indispensable to sustain
the enthusiasm of their collaborators and their perseverance in action.”
— The Right Honourable Jeanne Sauvé, Opening Speech to the National Conference for Young Leaders, June 2-8, 1991