Sediqzad was paired up with Black Men Build, which helps local disenfranchised communities with services such as food drives and Narcan deliveries to prevent overdose deaths. At its core, Black Men Build encourages its members to serve their communities and to build the tools needed to empower Black futures.

Unlike his peers, the rising junior was familiar with the issues facing disenfranchised communities in the city before joining the Commonwealth Project. Being a Harvard student allows him to see the issues in a new light, he said.

Veneziano works as a communications intern at the holistic legal advocacy nonprofit ArchCity Defenders, which “aims to combat state violence and the criminalization of poverty.” The organization focuses on three main issues: housing equity, civil rights litigation, and community engagement. Part of his everyday work includes reaching out to clients, sending press releases, and sharing media advisories. On Juneteenth, for example, he helped with an event that had Democratic U.S. House member Cori Bush, who represents St. Louis, as a speaker.

“I feel very grateful to be involved in an organization that’s doing such impactful work. It’s difficult work too. It’s very heavy talking with clients who have been through so much,” he said. “As someone who really values learning, this is probably the best place that I could have been because there’s just so much knowledge in this city and so much lived experience.”

The history and literature concentrator called St. Louis a microcosm of the U.S. and pointed to the “Delmar divide” as a prime example. Delmar Boulevard splits the city into two distinct economic and racial areas. “The segregation and housing inequality in the city is so obvious, and people don’t even try to hide it,” he continued. “Everyone knows it’s there. Everyone acknowledges it.”

St. Louis puts the issues faced in the U.S. “on blast,” which explains why the city has such a long history of activism. “These organizers are people who know what problems there are and how to fix them,” Veneziano said. “If you want to learn from someone about what issues there are in the United States and what possible solutions there might be, I think you need to include St. Louis in that conversation.”

Sediqzad agreed but said that cities with similar racial and economic profiles face the same issues. “If you look [at] a city like Baltimore, or New Orleans, [or] even at parts of L.A., you’ll see the same things going on,” he said. “I feel that’s something that we should not forget as people because there might be a St. Louis closer to you that you don’t even think about.”