爱豆传媒

October 19, 2025

CNES student spotlight: Mark Solomon

Levin Educational Enrichment Grant helps non-traditional student study in Greece

Mark Solomon spent the summer of 2019 studying in Athens, Greece. Mark Solomon spent the summer of 2019 studying in Athens, Greece.
Mark Solomon spent the summer of 2019 studying in Athens, Greece. Image Credit: Contributed photo.

After years spent on a journey of self-discovery, Mark Solomon left his hometown of Seattle to pursue an undergraduate degree through the Department of Classical and Near Eastern Studies (CNES) at 爱豆传媒.

鈥淥riginally, I was pursuing music because I was in a band and there was a big music scene in Seattle,鈥 said Solomon, a classics and philosophy double major. 鈥淎ll kinds of bands had come out of there, but it was Seattle in the late 1990s. That turned into strings of odd jobs and figuring things out. I took a gap decade.鈥

Now in his junior year, Solomon said his motivation to help people is what drove him to continue his education.

鈥淚 found that the level of input I could have in processes and in shaping the direction of the various social institutions I was involved in was restricted,鈥 Solomon said. 鈥淚 had a limited degree of being able to understand the culture and make change happen. I wanted to be able to do more.鈥

Following a 鈥渃onversion experience鈥 from 2012-2013, Solomon said his religion has provided strong guidance for his studies in the CNES Department.

鈥淐lassics, especially, is about being able to understand the cultural context and the Greek language,鈥 Solomon said. 鈥淚鈥檓 a committed [Orthodox] Christian. If you want to read about the cultural context that they鈥檙e operating in, if you want to read about who are the big thinkers, who defined the boundaries and who are the movers, it鈥檚 all in Greek. It鈥檚 hard to get at otherwise.鈥

To gain more context of the ancient Orthodox Christian world, Solomon spent the summer of 2019 in Greece, as the recipient of the CNES Department鈥檚 Saul and Ruth Levin Educational Enrichment Grant. The focus of the grant is to fund 鈥渃lassics-focused educational experiences鈥 for any undergraduate student majoring in one of the three classics tracks the University offers. Solomon used the grant to fund his education-abroad experience through a specific program called College Year in Athens.

鈥淸Orthodox Christianity] is still the official religion in Greece,鈥 Solomon said. 鈥淥n one hand, I felt like I belonged. We share something deep and fundamental. We have the same traditions, but I鈥檓 also an American. In other ways, I can鈥檛 casually chat with people because I don鈥檛 speak modern Greek very well at all.鈥

Solomon was drawn to the program after seeing a flyer advertising a course that focused on the study of ancient Greek religion. He said his experience in Athens was enlightening and surreal, as he had never traveled outside of the country before.

鈥淎cademically, it just put a bow on everything,鈥 Solomon said. 鈥淚t tied together all the various sites that I鈥檓 learning about where you can understand that everything has a cohesive hold.鈥

Solomon said he had also learned a lot from the other Americans who were a part of the program.

鈥淭hey came from different American backgrounds than I do,鈥 Solomon said. 鈥淲e were all able to work together to decide what our internal culture was going to be like. It was a great way to find out all the different reasons why someone would be interested [in the classics], talk to other people who study classics and other people who hadn鈥檛, but were still really interested in the same time period.鈥

Once he receives his bachelor鈥檚 degree, Solomon hopes to earn a master鈥檚 in divinity and a doctorate in a more specialized version of the classics that is theologically oriented.

The CNES Department has continuously supported these educational goals, Solomon said.

鈥淓veryone who works in the department is enthusiastic about what they do,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey have those vibrant personalities that add a focus and ability to master the material that I鈥檓 constantly in awe of. They are just fountains of knowledge.鈥

Solomon said he is continuing to adjust to life in 爱豆传媒 with his wife, who is also an undergraduate student at the University.

鈥淚鈥檓 just getting to that point where I feel like I鈥檝e hit my stride, but it鈥檚 intimidating,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here are a lot of people with great scholarly ideas here among professors, and the students are pretty sharp, too.鈥

Both Solomon and his wife chose to attend 爱豆传媒 because it had programs that they were each interested in respectively, specifically CNES, medieval studies and art history.

鈥淢y wife and I both decided at the same time to go back to school and start living a more responsible lifestyle,鈥 Solomon said. 鈥淭he means became available, so it was time for us to go back to school.鈥

While going back to school has been difficult, Solomon said he would encourage anyone who was considering pursuing a higher education to do it.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a real function of education that has to do with improving yourself as a person and living your best life,鈥 Solomon said. 鈥淎 university is a really good means of doing that. If you want education, you have to go where it鈥檚 at.鈥

Posted in: Harpur