WASHINGTON,D.C.-Two Indian-American teens are among five students selected for the prestigious National Students Poets Program, the White House has announced. First Lady Michelle Obama welcomed the budding poets, including Indian-Americans Maya Eashwaran and Gopal Raman, at the White House on Sept 8. Eashwaran (17) is from Alpharetta, GA and Raman is from Dallas,TX.The other three are Stella Binion from Chicago,
Joey Reisberg from Towson,MD and Maya Salameh from San Diego, CA.
Since its inception in 2011, the National Student Poets Program has showcased the essential role of writing and the arts in academic and personal success for audiences across the country. Each year, the five National Student Poets are chosen from a pool of outstanding writers, grades 9-11, who have received a national Scholastic Art and Writing Award for poetry. A first generation Indian-American, Eashwaran writes about foreigners, often incorporating personal experiences dealing with assimilation in the modern age. For Raman, a senior at St Mark’s School of Texas, poetry distills images and emotions into a form that brings people together. He cites poets like Billy Collins, Wallace Stevens, and Walt Whitman as his inspirations.
This is the first time that Indian Americans have made it to the prestigious program.
Since its inception in 2011, the National Student Poets Program has showcased the essential role of writing and the arts in academic and personal success for audiences across the country. Each year, the five National Student Poets are chosen from a pool of outstanding writers, grades 9-11, who have received a national Scholastic Art and Writing Award for poetry. A first generation Indian-American, Eashwaran writes about foreigners, often incorporating personal experiences dealing with assimilation in the modern age. For Raman, a senior at St Mark’s School of Texas, poetry distills images and emotions into a form that brings people together. He cites poets like Billy Collins, Wallace Stevens, and Walt Whitman as his inspirations.
This is the first time that Indian Americans have made it to the prestigious program.