When he goes to England this coming fall to study at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, the biggest worry for Jay A.H. Butler ’06 will probably be whether he is on time for his flight.
The recently announced international Rhodes Scholar from Bermuda admitted laughingly that he was a little bit late for his Rhodes Scholar interview in Bermuda over Thanksgiving break. But this senior’s tardiness did not faze the selection committee.
Butler, a Bermuda native, was the only Harvard undergraduate to be awarded a Rhodes Scholarship this year.
While Rhodes Scholars from the United States were announced in November 2005, the international Rhodes Scholars were not revealed until this month. Butler said international scholars had to wait to find out if they had been accepted to Oxford after they were chosen by their countries as scholars late last year.
Butler is the first Harvard student to be named a Bermuda Rhodes Scholar since Christina E. Storey ’93 received the honor.
According to John C.R. Collis, secretary of the Bermuda selection committee, the selection process in Bermuda is similar to the one used in the United States. “The candidates need to have very strong academics, as well as be compatible with all Rhodes criteria,” Collis said.
He also noted that although all of the candidates have studied at universities in the United States, Canada, or Great Britain, the Bermuda committee requires that candidates are citizens of Bermuda and have completed at least five years of schooling in Bermuda.
A history concentrator in Eliot House, Butler is expected to graduate in June with honors. His field of specialization is 19th-century Bermuda and he is writing a thesis on two prominent families from the era. Butler said he is using the families as a “microcosm to study the meaning of freedom and race relations” in Bermuda during that time period.
Butler spent last summer in London and his home country of Bermuda doing research for his thesis, and over the summer of 2004 he traveled to India under the Harvard University Committee on Human Rights Studies Summer Internship Grant. There, he worked with the South Asian Human Rights Documentation Center, an NGO in New Delhi.
Butler may be an academic force with a dedication to his thesis, but in typical Rhodes fashion, he is no bookworm. He has sung with the Kuumba Singers of Harvard College almost continuously since his freshman fall. He also played violin with the Harvard Baroque Chamber Orchestra and volunteers regularly at the Harvard Square Homeless Shelter. Butler was named a Harvard College Scholar for 2003-2004 and 2004-2005.
He plans to study Jurisprudence at Exeter College at Oxford.
“I knew I wanted to study law in England and valued the small tutorial system at Oxford,” he said.
Though it was his keen interest in human rights that pushed him in the direction of law, he says he has received most of his intellectual motivation from members of the History department at Harvard. He credits his two thesis advisors as “intellectual inspiration” for him.
“I was constantly being pushed and challenged,” Butler said. “The History department is very accessible and provided lots of attention.”
Although he says he never explicitly aimed for a Rhodes Scholarship, Butler was aware of the opportunity and looked upon a Rhodes as “always something that was there, something to reach for.”
The original Rhodes Scholarship was established in 1902 by Cecil John Rhodes for the purpose of bringing the most promising students in the English-speaking world to study at Oxford. Now, almost one hundred international Rhodes Scholarships are awarded annually. Bermuda is allowed to select one scholar each year.
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