The Princeton Prize in Race Relations is awarded each year to outstanding high school students across the country who are helping to increase understanding and mutual respect among all races and cultures.
The Cleveland prize, now in its second year, was recently awarded to Demi Zhang, a freshman at Orange High School who has devoted herself to achieving racial and cultural harmony through teaching others. Zhang has exposed her community to Chinese culture through art and music (she plays the Gu-Zheng, which is the Chinese zither) and created a Chinese club for neighborhood children.
"I found that people were not very aware of Chinese culture in Northeast Ohio, even though we have a sizeable Chinese community here," says the Pepper Pike resident. "Our Chinese heritage is important to my parents and grandparents, and I inherited that. Along with preserving my own identity, I wanted to address different barriers that exist between cultures in the form of ignorance."
"When people share aspects of their culture, they share part of their identity," she adds. "That kind of understanding is what the Princeton Prize is all about."
The winner of the Princeton Prize receives a $1,000 cash prize and is publicly recognized for his or her efforts. Two other Cleveland-area students -- Prateek Singh, a freshman at Solon High School, and Shivangi Bhatia, a sophomore at Orange -- received Certificates of Accomplishment for their work.
An awards event will take place on Thursday, May 24th at the Tudor Arms Hotel. For more information or to attend, contact Sandhya Gupta at sandhyag@alumni.princeton.edu.
Source: Sandhya Gupta, Demi Zhang
Writer: Lee Chilcote