Revy Fair Trade

Revy Fair Trade

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04/02/2026

Across the world, gifted children are working on their dreams. Join us!

It started when Aya was just 12 years old.
Her older sister had flown home from college for a visit, and during that trip, she noticed something — a lump that did not look right. Aya was not worried. She figured it was nothing. But her sister insisted they get it checked out. The news that came back was the worst they could have imagined.
Cancer.
The aggressive treatment to eliminate the tumor in her arm meant enduring 6 months of chemotherapy sessions every three weeks, with 3-day hospital stays each time. BlackNews
She was twelve years old.
She had dreamed since that same age — since before the diagnosis, almost as if she already knew what was coming — of becoming a neurologist. That dream was now in serious jeopardy. But Aya made a decision early on that would define everything that followed: she was not going to let cancer be the main character in her story.
"I did everything on my laptop," she said. "I was laying down on my hospital bed and the nurses would come in checking heart rate, checking my temperature and whatnot, while I would be rushing to finish an essay for IB history or English. Having the distraction of schoolwork, to be able to focus on something else, really helped." BlackNews
She was rushing to finish IB history essays from a chemo ward.
And she was not doing it alone.
Her mother brought her a laptop to the hospital every single day she was in chemo to make sure she would not fall behind in the classroom. Action News Jax Every day. Without fail. Her mother sat beside her through treatments that most adults cannot even imagine enduring, and made sure that when Aya felt strong enough to open that laptop, her education would be waiting for her.
"It helped to distract yourself," Aya reflected. "It helps put your mind at ease and keeps you focused on something else." Usobituary
She also played piano during treatment — using music, like schoolwork, as a way to keep her mind anchored to life and possibility rather than to fear.
The treatment worked. Aya went into remission.
And then — cancer behind her, strength rebuilt, two years of the hardest imaginable experience behind her — she went back to Ridgeview High School in Orange Park, Florida, and she did not just survive the academic environment.
She dominated it.
Aya was President of Beta Club, a member of Mu Alpha Theta, the Science Honor Society, debate club, and multicultural club. She was involved in earth club, college readiness, Future Business Leaders of America, the academic team, and the Senior board. She earned a spot in Spanish Honor Society, was an IB diploma candidate, and had played soccer and run track her freshman year. Yahoo!
She graduated Summa Cum Laude — with highest honours — from Ridgeview High School in 2023.
Her GPA: 4.77.
She was 18 years old, two years into remission, and she had just accomplished something extraordinary by any measure, let alone by the measure of someone who had spent a significant portion of their high school years receiving chemotherapy in a hospital bed.
The Tom Coughlin Jay Fund Foundation — an organisation dedicated to providing financial and emotional support to children battling cancer — stepped forward to help Aya take her next step. With their assistance, she was awarded a full scholarship to attend New York University. Yahoo!
She will study biology, on the path toward the career she dreamed of at age 12: neurology. The field of medicine that studies the brain and nervous system — the very systems that carry every thought, every memory, every dream a person has ever had.
The girl who chose to keep dreaming even in a hospital bed is going to spend her career helping other people do the same.
There is something almost symmetrical about the whole story. She was diagnosed at 12. She decided at 12 that she would be a neurologist. Cancer tried to take that dream away. And she carried both — the diagnosis and the dream — through six months of chemotherapy, through years of treatment and recovery, through four years of high school and every essay and exam and extracurricular activity she refused to let slip.
The lump her sister noticed. The laptop her mother brought every day. The piano. The IB history essay, written from a hospital bed while nurses checked her vitals.
Every one of those details matters. Because behind a 4.77 GPA and a scholarship to NYU is not just a remarkable academic achievement. It is a portrait of what it looks like when a person refuses, day after day, to let illness be louder than their own voice.
Aya Osman is cancer-free. She is a scholar. She is headed to New York University. And she is going to be a neurologist.
She decided that when she was 12.
Nothing was going to change it.

~Weird Wonders and Facts

05/14/2024
03/25/2024

Our first 5th Saturdays event at the 5th Street Arcades is a Bunny Bash 🐰🥳
Join Revy and the other small businesses in the Arcades for this FREE family-friendly event, including photo ops with our costumed bunny, face painting, balloon animals, live music and prizes!

Revy Fair Trade Accessories that save the planet and provide hope for future generations.
Our artisans use recycled and natural materials to craft handmade goods, our fair trade practices guarantee economic stability for their communities and their children.

03/24/2024

Come to the 5th Street Arcades next Saturday 11-5 for a free family-friendly "Bunny Bash"! Free facepainting, balloon creations, live music, and more! (The beautiful 1898 and 1911 5th Street Arcades are the former Colonial and Euclid Arcades, extending between Euclid and Prospect, between E. 4th and E. 6th Streets.) Cheers!!

Revy Fair Trade Accessories that save the planet and provide hope for future generations.
Our artisans use recycled and natural materials to craft handmade goods, our fair trade practices guarantee economic stability for their communities and their children.

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