Rhode Island’s Emerging Leaders — Pegah Rahmanian

GoLocalProv and United Way of Rhode Island

Rhode Island’s Emerging Leaders — Pegah Rahmanian

Pegah Rahmanian
Where is Rhode Island going and who is going to take us there? Well, United Way of Rhode Island and GoLocalProv have teamed up in identifying some of the emerging leaders in Rhode Island and asking them questions about leadership and the pathway to a better future in Rhode Island.

Meet: Pegah Rahmanian

Title/Employer: Executive Director, Youth In Action

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Age: 34

1. Who has been your most important mentor and why?

I don’t consider myself to have just one influential mentor. Instead, every person, reading, movement and art I’ve ever come across has taught me who I want to be, and who I don’t want to be – with no exception. I suppose the point is that I’ve always been in tune with all that surrounds me and have made deliberate choices as a result. It’s in those choices that I’ve found mentorship, both professionally and personally. As much as any person has influenced me, so has courage.

 

2. How are you helping to make Rhode Island better and what inspires you in your day-to-day work and life?

My work allows me to have a built-in response for this question – simply, the kids I work with! Undoubtedly, the single most inspiring and transforming thing in my life and as far as I can tell in this community – and really in any community I’ve lived – is the youth. I’ve always believed that genuine laughter is an indicator of all good things, and when I am laughing, I am creating and I am completely present. Our young people are such a rich source of everything that is good, including laughter, and simultaneously, they are a metaphor of all the ways in which we’ve disconnected from the good. In working alongside youth to create a different way of being, together we are demanding a better Rhode Island for all.

 

3. As an Emerging Leader, what have you learned from success and failure?

In my experience, success and failure – while on opposite ends of the spectrum – have the same effect. They have each taught me to dream and that anything is possible. The disposition that anything is possible means that I too am possible; in failure and in success. I love to dream, to imagine, and to be the person in the room that asks, “What if?” I don’t particularly like to plan, but instead prefer to dream and to act with intention, and that has always provided me something worth learning in the process.

 

4. What is one thing you feel everyone can do to help move our state forward?

I truly believe that everyone has something to offer to help move our state forward, but that the best way to initiate true change is to be willing to think unconventionally.

 

Most recent book read: A Dream of Two Rivers: Stories of Liminality, by Kl Pereira

Favorite place in Rhode Island: The intersection of Westminster and Sycamore; there are some bird tracks in the cement near a tree and I think they are pure magic.

Favorite hobby: Anything outdoors – I like to use the wilderness as therapy.

Something about you that people may be surprised to learn: I speak Farsi, fluently.


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