οcelebrates fifth class of Mastercard Foundation Scholars from sub-Saharan Africa
Derrick Mwangi flashed a nervous smile before standing up to speak at a dinner for his peers who came to the University of Toronto on a scholarship for outstanding students from sub-Saharan Africa. The Kenyan computer-science major – and amateur filmmaker – made a movie for the occasion.
On a screen above the podium, he showed the video that featured talking heads-style interviews with the other scholars. Mwangi says it was tough to keep the video under four minutes. “It was so much fun. They had a lot to say. … The footage was 30 minutes!”
Together with οPresident Meric Gertler, Reeta Roy, president and CEO of the Mastercard Foundation, and Joseph Wong, associate vice-president and vice-provost, international student experience, current Mastercard Foundation Scholars and alumni of the program welcomed the latest cohort of 15 students from Africa on Tuesday evening.
For the first time at the annual dinner, scholars who have recently graduated were also celebrated. Among the first group of scholars, who arrived in 2013, five have received their degrees and gone on to further studies and other exciting opportunities. Mubarek Abdela, an electrical engineering graduate and former Mastercard Foundation Scholar from Ethiopia, didn’t have to travel far to greet the incoming class – he has stayed at οto pursue a master’s. Nana Boa-Amponsem, on the other hand, couldn't make it because she is at the University of Bristol taking a master’s in public policy.
This year, 11 more scholars are expected to take the stage at Convocation Hall.
“These incredibly talented individuals aspire, quite realistically, to become future leaders in their home countries,” President Gertler said, “but while they are here, they are also making incredible contributions to this academic community.”
He added that a trip to Kigali, Rwanda, last fall has made him even more enthusiastic about the potential for partnerships in Africa. “That experience also gave me a new, first-hand insight into the incredible energy and potential that is already creating a wave of economic growth and social progress in the world’s youngest continent,” he said.
οwas one of the first universities to offer the scholarship for bright and disadvantaged students in sub-Saharan Africa. The Mastercard Foundation made the program possible with a US$22.8-million grant. The scholarship covers tuition in the Faculty of Arts & Sciences or Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering, along with the cost of books, living expenses and airfare.
Wong said the scholars’ experiences reminded him of his father’s stories about moving from rural Malaysia to the U.K. for graduate school in the 1960s. “When we were growing up we had this ratty old red blanket, and he would tell us it was the blanket given to him by his host family,” he said. He praised the students for their courage to move to a distant part of the world for their studies.
Dickson Eyoh, an associate professor in the department of political science, says the scholars’ stories hit close to home for him too. Since the program’s beginning, he has been a faculty adviser to the Mastercard Foundation Scholars. “For me it’s almost like going back down memory lane, because at some point I was a fresh international student in the U.S.,” from Cameroon. He has coached the students through the process of adjustment to, in some cases, a new language, culture and unfamiliar foods. It has been exciting to watch their progress as they overcome challenges, he says.
But where some see obstacles, Fikremariam Gedefaw sees opportunities.
Fikremariam Gedefaw, a Mastercard Foundation Scholar from Ethiopia, studies economics and math (photo by Geoffrey Vendeville)
The student from Bahir Dar, Ethiopia, who majors in economics and math, finished his first year at οwith a perfect 4.0 GPA. Although it's early in his academic career, he is already thinking big: He wants to change economics by bringing a new perspective to the field based on his experience of life in Africa.
“Obviously when you come from miles away, in a new culture – these are challenges. But they’re not just challenges,” he says, “I can’t think of another experience that has taught me so much.”