West Virginia Executive Spring 2019 | Page 24

[ community ] Talent Transplant Dr. Mirta Martin Martin with her husband, John, at her first commencement ceremony. Photo by Jared Tadlock/Fairmont State University. OLIVIA MILLER In celebration of those who have adopted our Mountain Mama as their own, “Talent Transplant” recognizes the Mountaineers who were born elsewhere but relocated here, embraced our beloved state and now help us work toward a brighter future. believed an American education was the path forward. It was she who instilled in Martin the values of education, faith and resilience, which propelled Martin to eventually establish herself in one of the most prestigious roles in higher education: university president. Obtaining an Education Martin and her sister, Carmen, with their parents and grandparents in Havana, Cuba. It was a long, complex and at times risky journey that brought Dr. Mirta Martin to West Virginia in January 2018 to serve as president of Fairmont State University. Born in Havana, Cuba, during the communist regime led by Fidel Castro, Martin was 6 years old when she, her grandmother and her sister were given permission by the Cuban government to go to Spain. The move separated them from the rest of their family for decades. On a leap of faith, the trio migrat- ed to the U.S. when Martin was about 13 years old. Martin’s grandmother 22 WEST VIRGINIA EXECUTIVE “When we arrived in the United States, like many other immigrants and fami- lies in America today, my grandmother worked two full-time jobs, and my sister and I went to school full time and worked a full-time job,” says Martin. Money made from cleaning houses put food on their table, but it wasn’t always enough. “I remember going hungry,” she says. “Not because we weren’t working but because life happened and we had to direct funds to other things.” For Martin, the idea of going to college seemed insurmountable. “If you can’t put enough food on your table, how are you going to afford college?” she says. It was a teacher by the name of Seena Rosenberg who helped her navigate the application process when she decided to apply to Duke University. Determined to see Martin go to college, Rosenberg even wrote the check needed to submit the application. Martin would go on to earn bachelor’s degrees in psychology and political science from Duke, a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Richmond and a Ph.D. in management and leadership from Virginia Commonwealth University. Education has the power to transform lives, and for Martin and her family, it undeniably did. Being the oldest sibling and the first to attend college, Martin’s success with her studies allowed her younger siblings to attend college as well. As a result, all of her and her siblings’ 13 children have earned college degrees, including her daughter, Katherine, who earned a Ph.D., and her son, Patrick, who received a master’s degree. Pursuing a Passion Although Martin began her career in the banking industry, where she quickly rose through the ranks, she chose to leave and pursue her passion for academia. “This was a wonderful move because it allowed me to have a foot in the banking industry while keeping the other foot in academia, which is a part of my DNA,” she says.