Midtown Manhattan: where skyscrapers loom large, business booms and tourists from around the world flock to experience a taste of the Big Apple. But hop the F train and ride north to the end of the line, and you’ll soon find yourself in Jamaica, Queens.
Far from the glitz of Rockefeller Center, Jamaica is a working-class neighborhood where families exist against a backdrop of grittier urban reality. It’s a community with clear challenges, yet it maintains a proud core, embodying the hustle, tenacity and perseverance for which New York City is known.
It’s the place that second-year University of Virginia student Abiola Ogunkoya calls home.
A first-generation American and first-generation college student, Ogunkoya grew up in Jamaica in a household with her mother and younger sister. Her mother, a hard-working teacher who believed in the importance of education, saw to it that her daughters committed to their studies. Throughout high school, Ogunkoya got excellent grades. When it was time to consider colleges, she was confident in her academic achievements, but worried about her family’s ability to afford the tuition.

