Ozanam Scholars Help the Needy Build Better Lives by Gaining Secure IDs

October 04, 2010

 

For a third consecutive year, St. John’s innovative Project Identity is improving the lives of some of New York’s neediest residents by assisting them in obtaining official identification they need to vote, apply for jobs and ensure self-sufficiency.

Project Identity is one example of the many services Ozanam Scholars perform under the rubric of the Vincentian Institute for Social Action (VISA) which was created to more visibly embed the University’s Catholic, Vincentian mission into students’ lives.

Ozanam Scholars, a select group of young women and men chosen on the basis of their academic excellence and dedication to service, work with clients of St. John’s Bread and Life to guide them through the official process of retrieving birth certificates and filing for, driver’s licenses, state IDs and social security cards — vital forms of identification. Located in Brooklyn, St. John’s Bread and Life is one of the city’s largest sources of food, clothing and other services for those in need.

“Project identity is an initiative most faithful to the essence of VISA and the Vincentian mission,” said Rev. James J. Maher, C.M. Vice President of Student Affairs. “It combines service, community based research and impact – a great example of how VISA was designed.”

It was after speaking with several clients at St. John’s Bread and Life that Ozanam Scholars Eugenia Soldatos and John Wilson discovered that one of the major contributing factors of poverty was that many of New York City’s disenfranchised did not possess proper forms of identification.

 “Frequently clients would come in and tell me that all of their belongings were stolen or misplaced,” explains Robin Kornstein ’13C, an environmental studies major and Ozanam Scholar. “It’s amazing how we take for granted how important it is to have these forms of identification. Without them we have no proof of who we are.”

Early mornings, four days a week small groups of dedicated Ozanam Scholars arrive at St. John’s Bread and Life via bus to assist clients with paperwork and provide them with funding to secure their lost belongings.

Students in Project Identity are guided by Service Research Mentors, St. John's faculty who assist with their research projects. The professors are Ming-Hui Li, Ed.D., and Andrew Ferdinandi, Ed.D., both Associate Professors of Human Services and Counseling in The School of Education.

Working with VISA, the students have shaped the program to become a resource for the entire community. Working with the clients one-on-one, initial consultations are set-up to assess what documents are needed and what paperwork is required to obtain the items. Then twice a week, students accompany the clients to the Department of Motor Vehicles to finalize the process.

“I’ll never forget the day one of my clients exclaimed ‘I am a person now!’ when she was handed her new state ID,” recalls Jennifer Traditi, Graduate Assistant of VISA. “In the program’s first year alone we were able to secure over 162 documents. Now people are coming into the soup kitchen just to see us.” 

Through St. John’s Vincentian Institute of Social Action or VISA, Ozanam Scholars are provided with the academic resources to address issues of global poverty and injustice and are encouraged to promote the Vincentian mission of the University through service all around the world.