Ebunoluwa Morakinyo is a scientist. She is also a home chef, writer, director and actress. Despite initial discomfort with theater, she embraced roles as personal challenges.
Oregon State University's African Student Association hosts Africa Night annually, celebrating the diversity of Africa through dance, music and cuisine.
In 2022 the theme was, “What I am is greater than what I was.”
Morakinyo scripted, gathered actors and performed in a play, telling the story of a fictional Nigerian art gallery owner facing self-doubt and familial pressure. Collaborating with Brandon Ndungu, a civil engineering student, she brought the story to life.
Participating in ASA events is important to Morakinyo because she is passionate about showing the Oregon State community what it means to be African.
“There’s more than the sadness or negative news,” she said. “There’s also stories of creativity and innovation and beautiful culture. There’s a reason why we love being African and I wanted to share that with others.”
Being a Beaver has stretched her to develop her passions inside and outside of the lab. A senior honors biochemistry and molecular biology student at Oregon State, her time on campus has included celebrating her culture while looking forward to a career dedicated to helping others.
Morakinyo will be taking a gap year before pursuing a career as a physician-scientist. In the upcoming year she will be working with Dr. Carsten Bonnemann in his National Institutes of Health lab under the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. The Bonnemann lab investigates childhood neuromuscular and neurogenic disorders, developing cutting-edge gene therapies for these diseases.