I just didn’t give up!!
Like most of the poor people living
in Mariabad, their utmost desire is to survive through their years of life.
These type of people are unaware of the complex life of Lahore & Islamabad.
But one student — the son of a
trader who sold Quaid-e-Azam style caps in Mariabad for a living — dared to tread
a radically different path, Karrar Hussain Jaffar, born in the Mariabad,
Balochistan, where people rarely educate themselves beyond matriculation &
to study at the prestigious Harvard University is far away from their
imaginations but for Karrar Hussain, he made it possible.
“My childhood friends, with whom I
spent my youth playing cricket, drive suzukis and rickshaws in Quetta for a
living, while I am a PhD student in the US,” says Karrar in a humble tone. “I
often wonder why God chose me, out of all the people in my community, to get
ahead in life?”
Karrar attributes his educational
achievement to his father’s passion for his children’s higher education. He
vividly remembers the chilly morning when his father showed him the ad for
Lahore University of Management Sciences’ national outreach programme (NOP),
which aimed to sponsor education and living expenses for capable students who
could not have afford to pay.
“I was doing my FSc at Cadet college
and didn’t even know a single thing about LUMS at that point in time,” he
fondly recollects. “I didn’t take the ad seriously because LUMS did not offer
engineering, the field I was interested in.”
When he returned back to college
from his winter break, he attended a presentation by a LUMS’ faculty member,
who introduced students to the national outreach programme.
“At the end of the presentation we
all took a pre-screening exam,” he explains. “A few weeks later, I got a letter
from LUMS inviting me to attend sponsored classes for SAT preparation.”
During the four weeks he fell in
love with the LUMS University. He studied very hard for the SAT exams and made
it for the university.
“I never knew things could be so
orderly and perfect; it was like I was in a foreign country,” he remarks.
“I felt very motivated to study hard and join the institution.”
But his herculean struggle with
English often left him frustrated.
“I had always dismissed English as a
colonial remnant in our country so I really struggled while preparing for the
test.”
Yet with utmost dedication, Karrar
managed to clear the screening exam at the end of the four-week training and
was selected to take the SAT exams, sponsored by the university. After
obtaining an impressive score in his SATs, Karrar got admitted in LUMS and was
offered a full scholarship and a monthly stipend.
“I came to LUMS in very high
spirits,” reminisces the bright student.
But Karrar, who had attended the NOP
training program at LUMS during the quiet summer break, had never seen the
institution in full semestral bloom. When he saw throngs of students, clad in
western wear and fluent in English, emerging from every nook and cranny, his
excitement gave way to culture shock.
“I was used to wearing shalwar
kamiz, but at LUMS most people were wearing jeans. I would greet people by
saying salaam, while the other students would ask ‘what’s up?’” he recollects
in an amused tone.
Often feeling like a misfit during
his first year at university, Karrar mostly spent his days with other NOP
students. “But after a year I managed to befriend other students from Lyceum
and Karachi Grammar school.”
He sheepishly adds, “After a year I
figured out that ‘what’s up?’ is equivalent to saying salaam.”
Karrar graduated on the Dean’s
honour list, with a cumulative grade point average of 3.7 and 3.68 in his
majors, Maths and Economics, respectively.
“I got job offers in the banking
industry after graduating but I turned them down because I wanted to tread an
academic path,” he explains in a categorical tone.
A year after graduating, Karrar got
a Fulbright scholarship to study in the US.
“I simply told the interview panel
that I want to come back to Balochistan after completing my studies. That’s
where my home is; that’s where I belong,” he explains passionately.
But perhaps the most memorable
moment in his life — an incident he recalls quite animatedly — was when he
found out that he made it to Harvard University.“I had no internet at home in
Mariabad so I walked 15 minutes or so to a nearby internet cafe to check my
email for Harvard’s decision,” he explains. “When I saw the acceptance email, I
just thought it was too good to be true.”
Yet after he raced back home to
reveal the news to his parents, his moment of rapture soon transformed into a
session of lengthy clarification.
“My mother asked me what Harvard was
and my father asked me to wait for potential offers by other universities” he
says with a laugh. “It took a while to convince them that I got into the
world’s top university.”
But ironically for a student, who
was left disconcerted by the ‘westernised’ student body at LUMS, adjusting to
life at an American institution was smooth sailing.
“After LUMS, I was very used to
being around different types of people so studying and living in the US was not
such a problem.”
Karrar completed his Master’s last
year and is currently pursuing a PhD in Economics from the University of
Southern California.
What does he want to do with all the
knowledge he is amassing?
“I want to increase educational
awareness in Balochistan—particularly amongst people from my community,” he
says.
The young academic’s goal might seem
like the reiteration of the clichéd promise of “development” that many educated
Pakistan promise their country. However, Karrar is actually a first-hand
witness of how education can revolutionize communities and places.
“Because of all that I achieved, my
parents allowed my sister to get college education in Lahore and my brother got
the motivation to get a scholarship to study in Australia,” he says with a hint
of pride.
Karrar confesses that most of his
family and friends cannot even comprehend what his life is like in the US. But
he is fairly confident that after he returns, he can change that.
“I can make them realise the value
of education,” he says.
Its better to publish these news on News channel rather than telling us ITS BIRTHDAY OF AMMITAB BACHAN OR whatever bollywood celebrities .
ReplyDeleteTHIS ARTICLE BY MAMOON TAHIR SEC: F
ReplyDeleteEducation must be promoted.
ReplyDeletePakistani people are surely the most hardworking and "never giving up so easily" nation..... cheers to this student who wrote his own destiny by hardwork and self determination and reached the best university of the world......
ReplyDelete