Jenna Dovydaitis has been interested in the intersection of public health and international security ever since she can remember.
Growing up, the political sciences and biology double major and says, βmy version of the superhero was always that doctor that saves the day from a super disease that takes over the world.β
That passion for science and geopolitics has only grown at ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½. Working under the supervision of GΓΌneΕ Murat TezcΓΌr, chair of ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½βs program, Dovydaitis has been working on an honors undergraduate thesis examining the medical and political ramifications of the Anfal campaign, an infamous chemical weapons attack perpetrated by Saddam Husseinβs regime in the late 1980s that resulted in the genocide of an estimated 50,000-100,000 Kurds.
The risk of chemical weapons being used in future terrorism attacks makes this a particularly salient topic for study, Dovydaitis says.

βThereβs a saying that βbiological weapons are the poor manβs atom bomb,β β she says. βThese weapons are actually quite easy and inexpensive, from the science standpoint, to create. And so, a lot of terrorism scholars predict their usage is only going to continue as the future of war and conflict develops.β
As she read the existing literature on Anfal, she learned about the lingering health consequences of being exposed to mustard and Sarin gas β a long list that includes chronic respiratory ailments, burns, damage to the eyes and an increased incidence of cancer.
βBut what I didnβt find a lot on was how a society recovers from such a massive incident of chemical warfare,β she says.
To get those answers, she would need to go to Iraqi Kurdistan, a country nearly 7,000 miles away that she had never stepped foot in. Fortunately, her program of study gave her a way in.
βThe Kurdish Political Sciences program is really well connected to the university system in Iraqi Kurdistan, and so we have many connections to professors and politicians in that area,β Dovydaitis says.
Dovydaitis spent two weeks doing on-the-ground fieldwork this summer, shuttling between the capital city of Erbil and other areas affected by the genocide. There, she interviewed the former deputy minister of Anfal and Martyrs, Baravan Hamdi Hussein, as well as activists, politicians, medical professionals, town council members and government lawyers.
She also met with survivors, documenting first-hand accounts of the genocideβs emotional and psychological toll. In the mountainous rural town of Halabja, βI met a mother who lost all of her children,β she says. βI met a father who lost his wife and children, people losing eight to ten family members in a day.β
βIt didnβt seem like anyone I met in that town wasnβt somehow affected by what happened.β β Jenna Dovydaiti, ΒιΆΉΣ³»΄«Γ½ student
βI canβt even begin to imagine how horrible that would be, to lose all of my siblings and the people I love in a single day. It didnβt seem like anyone I met in that town wasnβt somehow affected by what happened.β
The experience left a profound impression.
βI had an academic understanding of my topics of study before I got there,β Dovydaitis says. βBut it really was quite different to meet the people who are actually affected by it, and to gain a sort of emotional understanding. And now I feel this great sense of responsibility to do them justice in my thesis writing.β
Dovydaitis plans to work in government after going to medical school and says her thesis fieldwork was a βtransformativeβ experience.
βItβs different reading about it in books and doing assignments about your future career, and then doing something that would be like your future career,β she says. βItβs reassuring that what Iβve been saying Iβve wanted to do for a long time is actually what I want to do.β