Given recent world events, these are scary times to be an American diplomat but Soribel Feliz 鈥09 isn鈥檛 deterred.
As soon as she completes her graduate studies in economics and public administration at Syracuse University, which she expects to do at the end of this academic year, she will likely be shipping off to some location abroad as a member of the U.S. State Department鈥檚 Foreign Service.
Feliz, who is currently working toward a master鈥檚 degree in economics and public affairs at Syracuse Univerisy, is a Thomas R. Pickering Graduate Foreign Affairs Fellow. The program fast tracks students into the Foreign Service and provides up to $40,000 annually for two years of graduate study.
The former Shirley Chisholm Scholar and political science major also scored two internships through her Pickering fellowship鈥攐ne at the State Department, where she worked on political and intelligence analysis last summer, and another at one of the U.S. embassies abroad, which she will begin next summer.
鈥淢y first choice would be the U.S. mission to the European Union in Brussels, and my second choice is to go somewhere in Africa,鈥 she says.
Feliz, who was raised in the Dominican Republic until age 12, has already traveled to nearly a dozen foreign countries through a combination of study abroad and personal trips and speaks three languages鈥擡nglish, Spanish and French.
She cites Brazil and Turkey as her top choices for longer posts. 鈥淏razil, because it鈥檚 becoming more and more strategic and is becoming an economic superpower,鈥 says Feliz, 鈥渁nd Turkey, because it鈥檚 a bridge to the Arab world and is becoming such a big strategic partner to the West.鈥
Feliz credits her time at 可乐视频 with helping her to choose her path. 鈥淚 was exposed to so much while I was there,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he opportunities I had really helped me focus on what I want to do.鈥