From Utanga Refugee Camp becoming a paediatrician and to a director of a Medical Centre

From Utanga Refugee Camp to a paediatrician and to a director of a Medical Centre where she was treated as a sick refugee child.

upload_2019-10-25_0-29-58.jpeg


@Knowles say Maashallah to your fellow Utangan sister, Dr. Anisa Ibrahim.

Watch the video of her interview.


Somali refugee named director of Seattle clinic that cared for her as a child.

Dr. Ibrahim moved to the U.S. in 1993. Her family fled unrest from the Somali Civil War. She now leads Harborview Medical Center's Pediatrics Clinic.

SEATTLE — A woman who came to the United States as a young refugee in the 1990s now leads the Seattle clinic where she was cared for as a patient.

Dr. Anisa Ibrahim was recently promoted to medical director of Harborview Medical Center’s Pediatrics Clinic. She said the promotion brings her story full circle.

“It's one that I'm honoured and grateful for, but it’s also one that I've worked really hard, to be in a clinic that I am passionate for” said Dr. Ibrahim.

Dr. Ibrahim was brought to the U.S. in 1993 from Somalia when she was six years old. She said her family fled unrest from the Somali Civil War that began in 1992.

“We got to Kenya in 1992, and by 1993 we were resettled to Seattle," said Dr. Ibrahim. "That is a very short amount of time. The average amount of time a person spends in a refugee camp right now is 17 years."

She said she remembers a tuberculosis outbreak at her refugee camp, and her sibling getting the measles. When she arrived in Seattle, she and her sibling were treated at Harborview Medical Center's Pediatrics Clinic.

It was those experiences that made her want to become a doctor.

"I can say I know life is tough in a refugee camp," she said. "I know life is tough settling into a new country and not speaking English and not knowing where the grocery store is and being isolated from the rest of your family."

Dr. Ibrahim attended the University of Washington's School of Medicine and graduated in 2013. From there, she continued to do internships and her residency at the UW Department of Pediatrics.

Now, in her new position at Harborview Medical Center's Pediatrics Clinic, she gets to care for and do outreach for immigrant and refugee populations, with a focus on those from East Africa.

"It's amazing seeing children who I saw at three days of life now telling me about their first day of kindergarten," said Dr. Ibrahim.

Dr. Ibrahim emphasized that representation is extremely important. She said one thing she wished she had when she was younger, as a Somali refugee wearing a hijab, was someone who resembled herself.


"There are probably millions of little girls in refugee camps right now that are not being offered the opportunity to get an education that could probably be the next neurosurgeon," said Dr. Ibrahim. "It's the support that we're not giving them that makes them different from me, and it's not anything inherent to one particular person."

https://www.king5.com/article/news/...hild/281-9f6e0d27-9bca-49b6-951b-bfd108384ff1
 

Muji

VIP
Walal you don’t have to tag me to get your thread buzzing. Leave that for @Abdalla

Also we shouldn’t shame people for coming from refugee camps.
 
Walal you don’t have to tag me to get your thread buzzing. Leave that for @Abdalla

Also we shouldn’t shame people for coming from refugee camps.

@Knowles

Arguably, the most successful Somalis are those who were born in refugee camps or in the Middle East and came to the west as children. There is nothing to be embarrassed of one’s journey. What’s stopping those who were born in the West? Just came back from the Middle East and we were expecting to meet only local Arab investors, but I was surprised by the few serious enquires we received from loaded Somali/Saudis who wanted to invest their money in properties in Australia.
 
MaashaALLAH, congratulations to her.
.... but how did she manage to get out of that refugee camp in just 1 yr? that was quick indeed....
 

Muji

VIP
@Knowles

Arguably, the most successful Somalis are those who were born in refugee camps or in the Middle East and came to the west as children. There is nothing to be embarrassed of one’s journey. What’s stopping those who were born in the West? Just came back from the Middle East and we were expecting to meet only local Arab investors, but I was surprised by the few serious enquires we received from loaded Somali/Saudis who wanted to invest their money in properties in Australia.

If there was nothing wrong with being from a refugee camp you wouldn’t accuse me of being from there to get your thread buzzing. Your problem is that you think you’re smarter than everyone else walal. With that being said, welcome back but leave these antics to @Jaydaan
 
If there was nothing wrong with being from a refugee camp you wouldn’t accuse me of being from there to get your thread buzzing. Your problem is that you think you’re smarter than everyone else walal. With that being said, welcome back but leave these antics to @Jaydaan


@Knowles

Thanks dear, I tagged you because I wanted to gauge your viewpoint to the phenomenon of the success of the proportion of Somali women which far exceeds than those of their male counterparts, therefore, I wanted to ask you, why?

Here, they are discussing 'naag nool' iyo waxaan loo joogin.
 

Jiron

wanaag
NABADOON
VIP
Shes comes from one of the most down to earth and most welcoming families that I have had the pleasure of knowing. All her siblings are also college educated and hold professional jobs :)
 

Abdalla

Medical specialist in diagnosing Majeerteentitis
Prof.Dr.Eng.
VIP
Walal you don’t have to tag me to get your thread buzzing. Leave that for @Abdalla

Also we shouldn’t shame people for coming from refugee camps.

You were gone for a while and first thing you do is tag Abdalla.
 
Top