The Interpreter

2013 McMullan winner Eduardo Garcia


Eduardo Garcia 13C
Kay Hinton

Eduardo “Eddie” Garcia 13C excelled as a student, residence life adviser, tutor and mentor to preschool children, and as the founder of a medical interpretation service that has assisted hundreds of Atlanta’s immigrants and refugees. During his four years at Emory, he built a reputation for compassion, generosity, and kindness, and an unwavering dedication to building community, both on and off campus.

In recognition of his service, Garcia is this year’s recipient of the Lucius Lamar McMullan Award, which comes with $25,000, no strings attached. The award is given to an Emory College graduate who shows extraordinary promise of becoming a future leader and rare potential for service to their community, the nation, and the world. The award was established by Emory alumnus William L. Matheson 47C in honor of his uncle.

While some of the gift will go toward medical school, Garcia says he plans to give away a portion. “I’m giving it a lot of thought and prayer because I want to be sure that it can help make the biggest impact possible for people in need,” he says.

Garcia graduated with a major in chemistry and a minor in global health, culture, and society. He will attend the Paul L. Foster School of Medicine at Texas Tech University next year and hopes to become a family physician dedicated to underserved communities.

Garcia spent the first twelve years of his life in Mexico until his family immigrated to El Paso, Texas, where he graduated from high school. He says his family and his Catholic faith motivate and push him to do his best and to serve others. “My parents sacrificed everything to give us better opportunities,” Garcia says. “We didn’t have a lot, but we always had enough. They always taught me to be thankful for what you have, and when you receive blessings, you have an obligation to work to share those blessings and bless others,” he says.

That ideal motivated Garcia when he came to Emory as a QuestBridge Scholar, part of a national program that matches high-achieving, low- and middle- income students with some of the nation’s top colleges and universities. Students are provided with a full scholarship.

In his freshman year, Garcia volunteered more than three hundred hours in the AmeriCorps’ Jumpstart program, which prepares children from low-income communities for success in the classroom. He was named Emory’s Corps Member of the Year and rose to the position of team leader in his sophomore year, which involved an additional three hundred hours of service.

His most enduring contribution to the community may be his work in cofounding the Emory University Volunteer Medical Interpreter Service (VMIS). This program trains Emory students to serve as medical interpreters for non-English-speaking patients.

While volunteering in a free health clinic in Atlanta, Garcia noticed a serious lack of medical interpreters given the large Hispanic population they were serving, and he had long recognized how language barriers make access to quality health care difficult for individuals with limited English.

Garcia recruited other Emory students to assist him in cofounding the organization and secured a grant from Emory’s Office of the Executive Vice President for Health Affairs and a partnership with Grady Memorial Hospital. VMIS now thrives with a large group of undergraduate and graduate student interpreters, and collaborations with professors, local clinics, and nonprofit organizations.

He has also been active as an RA, or resident adviser. In recognition of his exemplary leadership and his outstanding commitment to the Atlanta community, Garcia received the J. J. Canter Award from the Office of Residence Life and Housing in 2011.

“I feel I was placed here on a path by God, and it is expected of me to give back and make a difference, so I’ve been committed to what I am passionate about,” Garcia says. “I love being connected to my community, and I’ve loved my time at Emory.”

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