Pauline Mutumwinka: “Down the Rabbit Hole”

Student speech at Harvard College Class Day 2012

Pauline Mutumwinka

In her Harvard oration, one of four student speeches given as part of the Class Day ceremony, Pauline Mutumwinka ’12 compared her Harvard experience to Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass: "For starters, I think you'll agree that freshman year felt a bit like falling down a rabbit hole."

Mutumwinka is particularly far from home—she is from Rwanda—and she spoke of struggling to figure out where she fit in: was she "Black/African American" or "Other" on the U.S. census? Should she pretend to care about the Red Sox just to make nice?

She said she emerged from Harvard having learned that it "is not the Wonderland where things always work like magic," but "it is the Wonderland where we tirelessly questoin our beliefs and assumptions—a place where we try to make sense of a world that often seems quite absurd, knowing that hard work, not magic, will solve this world's problems."

Sub topics

You might also like

Harvard Plans Contingencies for International Students

The Kennedy School and School of Public Health are developing online options.

Agree to Disagree

The Undergraduate asks if intellectualism is really on life support.

Most popular

House Committee Subpoenas Harvard Over Tuition Costs

The University must turn over all requested materials related to tuition and financial aid by mid-July. 

The Power of Patience

Teaching students the value of deceleration and immersive attention

The Professor Who Quantified Democracy

Erica Chenoweth’s data shows how—and when—authoritarians fall.

Explore More From Current Issue

How AI Could Be Raising Your Energy Bill

Utilities shift AI infrastructure costs onto consumers.

Harvard Commencement 2025

Harvard passes a test of its values, yet challenges loom.

The Woman Who Rode Horses Into the Water

Scrapbooking a woman who rode horses into the sea