Yvette Clairjeane

Yvette Clairjeane 10’C

St. John’s Alum Makes Her Mark
Through Service and Academics

As Yvette Clairjeane ‘10C, sets out on her post-graduate career, she brings with her the academic and leadership skills she developed at St. John’s University.  A Government and Politics major, she not only maintained an above-average GPA, but also was instrumental in developing initiatives giving students a voice in St. John’s decision-making process.

These initiatives grew out of her service with Student Government, Inc. where she rose to become an Executive Board member. Ultimately, her leadership talents merged with her academic achievements when she was asked to join the President’s Honor Society —St. John’s highest honor.

Born in the U.S., Yvette spent the first six years of her life in Haiti before her family moved to Brooklyn’s culturally diverse Crown Heights neighborhood. This background made St. John’s an attractive choice. “I decided to pick St. John’s because of its reputation for multiculturism, its academic excellence and its Vincentian and Catholic mission,” she said. “In particular, the University’s emphasis on community service and its tradition of giving back to those less fortunate made it the place for me.”

Yvette participated in a variety of service activities reflecting her interests and values. These included working at soup kitchens in Rome, helping domestic abuse victims as a member of the Ron Brown Pre-Law Summer Prep Program and interning at the Red Hook Community Justice Center in Brooklyn, where she worked with disadvantaged female victims of crime.

She also took part in the University’s Women in Leadership Certificate Program and provided service in Lourdes, New Orleans and Philadelphia. “Helping Hurricane Katrina victims was especially gratifying,” she said.

“St. John’s taught me to value hands-on service in all its different forms  — big, small, local and global. I now understand that this is what St. Vincent de Paul meant when he talked about serving the needy with the strength of our arms and the sweat of our brow,” said Yvettte.