New space, same place
The Zowie Banteah Cultural Center is moving, but its mission to promote Indigenous visibility remains the same.
Keep up with all the ways in which the Mount Holyoke community is pushing the limits of human knowledge, building lasting bonds and leading the way forward — on campus and around the world.
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The Zowie Banteah Cultural Center is moving, but its mission to promote Indigenous visibility remains the same.
“Having financial aid and scholarships has been huge. It meant I could work a few hours less and have time to study and do orgs, relax a little bit and decompress from the chaos of the world. I’m so grateful for it.”
Isabel DiBiasio-Hudson discusses the MHC community: rooted in compassion, empathy and a desire to support people in the way that they want and need to be.
The person I am leaving Mount Holyoke College is certainly not the student who applied or walked onto the campus as a first-year student. I knew I would be happy here. What I didn’t expect was how much the community would change me.
Besides its beauty, the next thing I noticed — or should I say, felt — was the energy running through the campus. It’s vibrant. It’s diverse. Everyone was so friendly and welcoming. I could see myself making friends here. I pictured myself sitting in the Williston Library.
Cheers rang out across the Mount Holyoke College campus during the first in-person Convocation since the beginning of the pandemic.
Mount Holyoke College welcomes students back to the long-awaited return to fully in-person classes and community.
Mount Holyoke College has made a variety of upgrades and improvements to its infrastructure to welcome the student body to campus.
The Cording Ceremony is a moment to honor the unique challenges that first-generation and low-income students overcome to graduate.
Now in its fifth year at Mount Holyoke College, the Lavender Ceremony is a celebratory rite of passage for the LGBTQ community.