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Student Speaker at Winter Graduation Offers Hope to Other Immigrants

Editor's Note: This profile is part of a series that features the stories of more than a dozen graduates whose outstanding educational journeys have culminated in a UMGC degree.

Gil Klein
By Gil Klein
  • Commencement |
  • News

When student Mohamed Babiker spoke at the University of Maryland Global Campus (UMGC), commencement, his story rang true for other students who overcame great odds to earn their diplomas. But it also resonated in a particularly touching way for recent immigrants who struggle to make a place for themselves in their new country.

Babiker, who was selected as student speaker for ,聽was born and raised in Sudan, a country marked by a civil war and long history of instability.聽 He said his family emigrated when it beat the odds and won a coveted permanent residency visa in the U.S. government鈥檚 annual lottery.聽

鈥淲hen my parents were granted this opportunity, they responded by working to lift themselves by the bootstraps, working multiple shifts and long hours, taking courses and classes to make themselves fit parent for us in this country鈥攏ot knowing that their spirit alone was more than fit to raise queens and kings long before they crossed oceans to come here,鈥 Babiker said.

In sharing his family鈥檚 story, he also acknowledged how his fellow students also made sacrifices on the way to their degrees.

鈥淭hey sacrificed precious energy and time鈥攎ind, body and soul鈥攖o get to where they are today,鈥 Babiker said 鈥淚n the process, I learned that it takes vision, creativity and courage to view yourself as what you could be instead of what you have been and what you are.聽

鈥淚t is the ultimate display of bravery and pursuit of freedom to take that courage and transform it into action,鈥 he added.

Babiker said that after his family arrived in the United States, his mother would take him and his sisters to the local library and language center where she spent half the day, several times a week, studying English. His father juggled multiple jobs to provide for the family,聽flipping burgers at Burger King, working at a Chinese takeout, delivering pizza late into the night, driving a taxi.

鈥淢y sisters and I sometimes didn鈥檛 see him for days,鈥 Babiker said.

Soon, his mother was working odd hours so the family had enough money to move from a cramped apartment in a dangerous neighborhood to a new place where they didn鈥檛 have to fear being alone while their parents worked.

鈥淢y father and mother would wake me and my sisters in the middle of the night and pack us into her beat-up Mercury Villager to drive my mother to her nightshift at a television manufacturing company where she would clean new television screens before they were installed,鈥滲abiker recalled.

All that hard work paid off. His parents saved enough to have the family visit Sudan to stay in touch with their roots while also supporting their children鈥檚 education. Babiker鈥檚 siblings enrolled in聽college and graduate programs, and his聽youngest sister excelled in a local STEM charter school.聽

Now Babiker鈥檚 is graduation from UMGC with a Master聽of Science in Cloud Computing Systems joins the family鈥檚 achievements.

Babiker said some people鈥檚 dreams get lost through timidity and discouragement. But that doesn鈥檛 apply to the UMGC graduates who sacrificed so much to pursue their aspirations, he said.

鈥淲e have chosen to stand valiantly in expressing who we are in our entirety, in our wholeness, unapologetically,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e stand before you today, bold, authentic and rich in spirit as we march forward bringing our dreams to life.聽

鈥淢y parents, myself, you all, we are the epitome of our ancestors鈥 wildest dreams.鈥