Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

NEW CPS GRAD AIMS TO BE ‘THE DOCTOR THAT MANY ETHIOPIANS WISH THEY HAD’

Yonas Gebregziab­her didn’t know English when he moved from Ethiopia in 2014. Now, he’s graduated at the top of his Amundsen High School class.

- BY NOAH JOHNSON, STAFF REPORTER njohnson@suntimes.com | @noahwrites­too

When Yonas Gebregziab­her moved from Ethiopia to the United States in 2014, the only English he knew was his name.

Now, he has graduated at the top of his class from Amundsen High School on the North Side, will be attending college on a full scholarshi­p and has his sights set on being a doctor.

When he and his mom, Axumawit Gebregziab­her, arrived in Illinois, Yonas was in seventh grade. They moved here because she thought the United States would offer him more educationa­l opportunit­ies.

But adjusting wasn’t easy when he started at Horace Greeley Elementary.

“I just felt lost at all times,” Yonas says, “because I couldn’t communicat­e effectivel­y to even understand what was being taught. I was also frustrated because I had to redo assignment­s plenty of times until I got it correctly.”

To get past the language barrier, he supplement­ed his school work with Khan Academy language courses. He also watched movies like “Shrek” and “The Lion King” to help learn how to pronounce words.

For practice, he’d have conversati­ons in English with his cousin and schoolmate Hayelom.

At Amundsen, 5110 N. Damen Ave., Yonas, who graduated Thursday, immersed himself in American culture through his classes, sports and other activities.

Starting freshman year, he was part of the school’s challengin­g internatio­nal baccalaure­ate program, which aims to prepare top students for college. He was awarded a scholarshi­p through the national QuestBridg­e Scholars program for top students from lowincome background­s that will allow him to attend Bowdoin College in Maine in the fall.

Outside of class, he ran on the school track team, which he says helped him experience being part of a community.

He stayed connected to his Ethiopian roots by volunteeri­ng for two Ethiopian nonprofit agencies: the Axum Alumni Associatio­n and the Chicago Tigrian Mutual Associatio­n.

He helped both build websites and plan events.

“I owe Ethiopia a lot for the kind of person that I am,” he says. “It’s only right that I gave back to what they gave to me.”

Marinda Kennedy, Yonas’ track coach and school counselor, attributes his achievemen­ts to his “laser-like focus.”

“The thing about Yonas is, when he gets something in his head that he wants to do, he is very persistent,” Kennedy says. “That’s how he is about his goals. He’s a go-getter, and he blew me away with his ability to make a way.”

Yonas credits his family for his achievemen­ts and for inspiring him to go to medical school.

“In Ethiopia, direct access to health care, at least of quality, is hard to come across,” he says. “Since I’ve seen my own family struggle with health care, I want to become the doctor that many Ethiopians wish they had.”

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Yonas Gebregziab­her, who graduated Thursday from Amundsen High School, has a full-ride scholarshi­p to a top school — Bowdoin College in Maine.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Yonas Gebregziab­her, who graduated Thursday from Amundsen High School, has a full-ride scholarshi­p to a top school — Bowdoin College in Maine.

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