After Decade Abroad at U.S. Embassies, Siblings Brit and Easmond Chose Parentsâ Alma Mater
Image by Ed Brennen
12/04/2019
By Ed Brennen
Ann and Roosevelt Tsewole were enjoying, by their own measure, a âgreat life.â
After meeting at ĐÓ°É´ŤĂ˝ in 1994 and getting married in 1997, the Tsewoles settled in Dracut and were raising three kids: Brit, Easmond and Bernice. By 2005, they both had jobs they enjoyed. Ann (Isaac) â94, who earned a bachelor of science in biology from the Kennedy College of Sciences, was working at the Greater Lawrence Family Health Center on a grant sheâd received from the National Health Services Corps. Roosevelt â95, who earned a bachelorâs degree in management from the Manning School of Business, was in charge of information technology for a business communications company in central Massachusetts.
âWe had really nice jobs and we were very involved,â Ann recalls. âBut we noticed that we didnât have as much good, quality family time as we would like.â
Ann sat down with Roosevelt one night to discuss their familyâs future. Roosevelt was flipping through the pages of a magazine as they talked and stopped on an advertisement for career opportunities overseas with the U.S. Department of State.
âWhy donât you join the Foreign Service?â he asked on a whim.
Ann, a Sierra Leone native who emigrated to the United States with her family at age 10, was intrigued and decided to apply. A year later, in September 2006, the Tsewole (pronounced say-wo-lay) family left its life in the Merrimack Valley behind and moved to Malawi in southeastern Africa, where Ann was hired as the medical attachĂŠ for the U.S. Embassy. It would be her job to make sure embassy employees and visiting U.S. dignitaries had access to any local medical care they needed.
Image by courtesy
In the decade since, Annâs rotating State Department work has taken the family to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Cameroon, Sri Lanka and Bahrain, where she is currently in the middle of a two-year posting. Roosevelt, a Cameroon native who emigrated to Lowell in 1989, put his IT career on hold for the familyâs international adventure. Heâs found work at the embassies along the way, including his current job of helping new diplomats find housing during their posts.
âWeâve been able to bond as a family and spend more quality time together than I think we would have in the States, where we were always being pulled in different directions,â Ann said recently by phone from Bahrain, a small island nation off the coast of Saudi Arabia in the Persian Gulf.
The Tsewole kids have grown up immersed in different cultures and, at the embassies, have met Secretaries of State Hillary Clinton, John Kerry and Mike Pompeo. Theyâve also attended top English-speaking schools in each of the countries in which theyâve lived, where their classmates have included the children of world leaders. (Once, when Brit forgot her basketball shoes, the daughter of Cameroonâs president took off her shoes and lent them to her.)
When it came time for college, though, the Tsewole kids found themselves pulled in a familiar direction â back home to attend their parentsâ alma mater. Brit is currently a junior business administration major with a concentration in management information systems (MIS), while Easmond is a sophomore business administration major with a concentration in finance. (Bernice is still a junior in high school in Bahrain.)
Perfect medley: IT and music
âĐÓ°É´ŤĂ˝ was always on my list,â says Brit, who also considered Pace, Fordham and Temple universities but ultimately chose to return to the place where sheâd lived until age 9. The family held onto their home in Dracut after moving abroad, and Brit now lives there as a commuter student. âItâs nice to have that kind of anchor, moving back here.â
While Brit is following in her fatherâs MIS footsteps and is âpassionate about IT,â she also has another passion: music. Sheâs the founder, lead singer and guitarist for a four-piece jazz-punk band called The Seawolves (âSeawolfâ was her nickname in middle school when kids couldnât pronounce her last name).
Image by Ed Brennen
âItâs hard work, but itâs fun,â says Brit, who balances a part-time job in Methuen with six hours of rehearsals each week. She also manages the bandâs marketing and lines up basement shows and gigs at local venues such as the Worthen House Cafe. In September, The Seawolves released their first EP, âSuffering and Smiling.â
âHopefully, I can make music a career,â says Brit, who purposely chose not to pursue a degree in music at UML. âMusic is my identity in a way, and to study it in school would be putting it in too much of a box. When it comes to my art, I donât want it to be confined.â
Instead, sheâs learning the business side of music through her courses in the Manning School. She says Visiting Faculty Lecturer Paul Keyser has taught her how to be more creative with her marketing content, and her Organizational Behavior class with Asst. Prof. Elana Feldman has helped her understand how to keep a band together. (âWhen they say itâs expensive to bring someone on to a new job, now I know exactly what they mean,â she says.)
Thanks to her experience growing up around so many different people, Britâs also discovered that sheâs a good networker â which comes in handy when promoting her band.
âThe scene around Lowell and at school is so welcoming, so Iâve been able to move my music career up the ladder,â she says. âIâm definitely happy I chose to come here.â
And now that her younger brother Easmond is on campus, Brit has an even wider network.
âA business mindsetâ
âWeâre all River Hawks and we love the school,â says Easmond, who had UML atop his list when applying to college. Besides the âfamilial bondsâ he felt for the school, he was drawn by a newfound appreciation for Lowellâs rich history.
âBecause of oil, everything is very new in Bahrain, like it is in Dubai and Qatar,â Easmond says. âWhile itâs very luxurious and I do enjoy being over there, itâs not nearly as authentic as Lowell. Thereâs not that level of plasticity here, where you have old mills and history thatâs unmatched in the rest of the country.â
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Living abroad sparked interests in finance, international business and politics that Easmond is now cultivating in his courses and extracurricular activities. The Honors College student is treasurer of the Manning Consulting Group, serves as a and is the statewide rep for the universityâs MASSPIRG chapter, where heâs working to register students to vote in local and national elections.
Last summer, Easmond returned to Bahrain for an internship at the U.S. Embassy. Working in the finance department, he learned about converting international currencies, processed embassy bills and invoices and assisted with budgeting. He also helped coordinate a visit from Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin and Jared Kushner, the senior advisor and son-in-law of President Trump.
âI really enjoyed being there for that. It was a great experience,â says Easmond, who notes that embassy work is completely apolitical. âWe donât discuss politics; weâre there for work. Itâs a very courteous environment.â
Could politics be in his future someday?
âPotentially, but I also really like nonprofit work,â he says. âIâm interested in opening a microfinance bank in a developing country in Africa to help the population start a business mindset, so we can see more economic growth there.â
He also plans to do more traveling. In January, Easmond is taking part in the Honors Study Abroad trip to Cuba â which will come on the heels of a 10-day trip to Bahrain to see the family.
âItâs going to be a busy December,â says Easmond, who, like Brit, is happy with his decision to attend his parentsâ alma mater. âI really enjoy the academics here and adore the professors. They really care about the students.â
âShe was the oneâ
Perhaps because of his diplomatic upbringing, itâs not unusual to see Easmond wearing a suit on campus.
âHe always dressed well,â Ann says with a laugh before noting that Roosevelt also used to wear suits when he was a student.
Ann and Roosevelt met during the spring semester of her senior year. After rebuffing him several times, Ann agreed to one date with Roosevelt when they crossed paths in the elevator at Olsen Hall. On the drive home from dinner at the Pheasant Lane Mall in Nashua, Roosevelt suggested that they get married.
Image by courtesy
âThatâs kind of strange to say on the first date,â Ann remembers thinking. But sheâd heard similar lines before. âIt was so funny, because usually when a guy would talk about marriage, I would just bust out laughing. But I remember looking out the window and thinking, âHmm. Iâm not laughing this time around. Whatâs different about the situation?ââ
âI just sensed that she was the one,â Roosevelt says. âShe had everything.â
Ann suggested they give it six months âto see if itâs something that will last.â
Theyâve been married for 23 years.
After their youngest, Bernice, goes to college, Ann says she will put in five more years with the State Department. Then, they may move back to Dracut to begin the next chapter of life.
They didnât pressure Brit and Easmond to attend UML, nor will they push Bernice to do so.
âThey do what they want,â says Roosevelt, who had an aunt and uncle that attended UML. âAs long as they stay on the right track, thatâs all that counts. We just support them.â
Ann, whose two brothers attended UMass Amherst, always wanted to live in Massachusetts because of its world-class higher education. She hopes her kids âkeep shiningâ at ĐÓ°É´ŤĂ˝.
âWeâre a big UMass family, and all of us have done very well,â she says.