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New life for old reads

Concordia Used Book Fair — from October 2 to 4 — supports deserving students
September 30, 2016
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By Susan Attafuah-Callender


It’s a win-win-win at the 20th annual Concordia Used Book Fair. Those who donate their collections rest easy knowing they’ve found a happy home, book lovers stock up on affordable reads and students throughout Concordia benefit from the proceeds.

“I’m going this year for sure!” says student Maude Brisson-McKenna. In 2015 she received a Concordia Used Book Fair Scholarship.

This year, Brisson-McKenna wants to pay it forward. “I usually buy from used book stores but now I can help another student,” she says.

On October 3 and 4, the atrium of the Engineering, Computer Science and Visual Arts Integrated Complex (EV Building) will be piled high with paperbacks and hardcovers from every genre.

Amir El Bawab Funds raised help students like Amir El Bawab, a Concordia Used Book Fair Scholarship recipient. The Concordia Used Book Fair accepts donations year-round from organizations and individuals.

To date, the Concordia Used Book Fair has raised more than $160,000 — all donated to scholarships, bursaries and the Multi-faith and Spirituality Centre’s Student Emergency and Food Fund. In 2015-16, the centre had more than 580 visits from some 266 students, and distributed $55,385 in grocery gift cards, about $95 per visit.

“It was such a huge weight off my shoulders. I could focus more on studying than on saving money,” says Brisson-McKenna of receiving her award.

Pursuing an honours bachelor degree in behavioural neuroscience in the Department of Psychology, she doesn’t have a lot of time to earn money. “It’s hard to be a student. A lot of us are struggling so these scholarships are extremely helpful,” Brisson-McKenna says.

“On the personal side, it’s really good encouragement to keep up the good work,” says Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering student Amir El Bawab. The Concordia Used Book Fair Scholarship was the first academic award he received at university.

Returning for his third year of studies after a summer internship with the communications technology company Ericsson Canada, El Bawab says he was motivated to earn the Stelvio Software Engineering Excellence Scholarship and an Undergraduate Student Research Award from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.

Multi-faith and Spirituality Centre staff “We’re very welcoming and non-judgemental,” says Ellie Hummel (right), chaplain and coordinator of the Multi-faith and Spirituality Centre, which distributes Concordia’s Student Emergency and Food Fund. “It’s hard to ask for money if you’re a young person trying to make it on your own, so I really respect those students who come and ask.”

Beyond the deserving scholarship and bursary recipients that the Used Book Fair supports, its profits go to the Multi-faith and Spirituality Centre’s Student Emergency and Food Fund.

The centre’s chaplain and coordinator Ellie Hummel says her staff meets almost daily with students who need a helping hand to feed themselves and their families.

A welcoming space to explore questions of spirituality and experience interfaith, the Multi-faith and Spirituality Centre makes it easy for students to receive grocery store gift cards in tough times.

“It’s not just about the money — yes, it means a lot if you can’t eat and now you can buy groceries — but it’s also knowing that the whole community is behind you,” says Hummel.

Donations to the Student Emergency and Food Fund come from various Concordia departments and individual contributions. The Concordia Used Book Fair is the fund’s biggest single donor, giving about half of its proceeds annually.

“To me, the Concordia Used Book Fair really symbolizes what the university stands for,” says Hummel. “The person sorting books might be vice-president in some office or a student or whoever, but we all work together for a common cause — to have our students succeed.”



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