±ÊŽÇČőłÙ±đ»ć:ÌęFebruary 29, 2024
By: Alison DeLory
When Cynthia Pilichos (BAâ68, BEdâ75) first became involved with the Womenâs Division of the HÂț» Alumni Association (DAA) in the 1980s, she was teaching full-time and raising two daughters.
âLife was very busy â and it still is!â says Pilichos. While now retired from the school board, she continues to be one of the long-serving co-leads of the Womenâs Division along with Elizabeth Ryan (BAâ70).
âI absorbed it from my parents and my grandparents too, that strong sense of giving back,â Pilichos says. Her father, Dr. Harry Smith, was the first lay person to serve as President of the University of Kingâs College and he was also Nova Scotiaâs first ombudsman.
Pilichos also volunteers with the Anglican Diocese, primarily with an diocesan organization that she has been integrally involved in reshaping for the future. She is also a member of various groups, including the almost century-old Dal/Kingâs reading clubâwhose original membership was faculty membersâ wives.
The Womenâs Divisionâs roots also run deep. It claims proudly to be the oldest alumni association at Dal. It began with the idea of empowering women. Its first task was securing housing for female students so they could pursue a university degree.
When Jennie Shirreff Eddy donated the full amount required to build a womenâs residence in 1920, to be named for her parents, , the money the Womenâs Division had raised to that point was used to furnish three key public spaces in Shirreff Hall: the Victorian Lounge, the Library, and the Study Hall. An endowment of the Womenâs Division continues this beautification.
Evolution of fundraising
âPeople, particularly women of a certain [i.e. older] age, are used to a typical structure and working with organizations a standard way,â says Pilichos. Today, however, she says younger women approach volunteerism differently.
A career educator
Pilichos enjoyed a 30-year career teaching French and serving as a school principal, and then continued teaching, facilitating, and consulting on contracts for another 12 years both with the Halifax school board and other organizations including the Department of Justice and a leadership consortium.
âLook and listenâ she says was her main advice to students new to learning French.
She says that while it wasnât without challenges, she loved teaching, particularly at the elementary level. âClass-time was always short and passed quickly; you had to stop while the kids were still having fun,â she says. Her favourite thing, she adds, was âWhen you were successful in getting kids to see what you were trying to convey. That a-ha moment.â
Moving forward
Pilichos hopes a revitalized presence for the Womenâs Division will position it well for the future. Maybe a deeper exploration of the empowerment of women with a wider public, using current technologies, she says, is one avenue to pursue.
âWe have to adjust how we communicate. We do now use email, but maybe we need to start having meetings on Zoom instead of in homes.â They are now resuming meetings to figure out a path forward, with great support from alumni engagement in the Office of Advancement and a number of new alumni who have expressed interest.
Though much has changed over Pilichosâs lifetime, whether that be with her work or volunteerism, there has been one constant that has allowed her to enjoy it all.
âYou have to be interested in people and find the stories they share fascinating.â