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WHEN STUDYING REPRESENTS A NEW BEGINNING

May 11, 2026

This month, we highlight Hazem Sharif’s participation in USCRI Latin America and the Caribbean Weekly Keynote Still Standing. Hazem, a graduate of the Habesha Project in the field of Business Administration from the University of Monterrey, shared how access to higher education can transform the life trajectories of people affected by forced displacement.  

“People think that displaced people only lose material things, but they also lose their imagined future and their identity,” 

Through his testimony, he explained how higher education allowed him to recover something that the context of war in his country had taken away from him: the possibility of imagining a future.

“I would think that (education) restores your right to imagine a future…you go from being an object in  to being a subject with something to say.” 

Hazem also recounted how the constant state of alert and the instability of living in a place where he did not feel he belonged deprived him, for years, of imagining his life in the long term. It was then that, when the opportunity arose to continue his studies, the freedom to believe in a future that he could build for himself also resurfaced. 

Currently, Hazem is responsible for investment funds at the same university that opened the doors for him to pursue his higher education, and he hopes that these types of opportunities promoted by USCRI Latin America and the Caribbean, the Shapiro Foundation, and universities in Mexico will reach more people.

See full participation here


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