
Courtesy of Mohamad al-Tabbakh
Mohamad al-Tabbakh, a recipient of emergency education funds from Jusoor, stands outside the Arkansas Technical University Library, where he attends graduate school.
CAIRO – When the violence broke out in Syria, Ayham Ahmad’s parents and brother fled their home in Aleppo, Syria’s largest city with a population of 2.9 million, for neighboring Turkey. They wanted to spare their youngest son from having to enlist in the Syrian Army and turn his gun on his countrymen.
Ahmad, 26, had left Aleppo before the conflict began to attend Syracuse University in New York to pursue a graduate degree in computer science, an opportunity not available in his own country.
With his family unable to support him, the future he had worked so hard to achieve was in jeopardy as a result of the conflict.
He went to the international office at Syracuse University for guidance and they recommended that he apply for emergency funding from an organization aptly named “Jusoor” in Arabic or “Bridges” in English.
Their response was immediate. “It was a very good feeling when somebody called me to tell me I would be able to receive funds [for tuition], to know that people cared about my education. They really do care. I don’t know what would have happened without the funds.” His parents were relieved and grateful. At least one dream would not have to be sacrificed.
The financial miracle was the result of the work of expatriate Syrians who decided to take action to help their fellow citizens caught in the crossfires of the conflict.
“In Syria my mother was a professor at the University of Aleppo, my father was a mechanical engineer and my brother was studying law,” said Ahmad, in a phone interview. “But now [my brother] had to stop his education and they cannot work. My parents are living off their savings [in Turkey]. The situation is deteriorating every day. They cannot return to Syria without putting the whole family in danger.”
Just like the other approximately 100,000 Syrian citizens, according to the UN Refugee Agency, who have been forced to flee their country because of the violent conflict between President Bashar al-Assad and anti-government forces that began in March 2001, Ahmad’s family faces an uncertain future.
A cause everyone believes in: education
“We wanted to do something. The situation in Syria was urgent, people really want to help but don’t know how. Jussor is an outlet,” said Dania Ismail, co-founder of Jussor and a Dubai resident, in a phone interview. “We don’t take sides on politics or religion, and people appreciate having a way to help without getting entangled with politics.”
Ismail and her colleagues knew they wanted to focus on what unites people rather than on what divides them.

Courtesy Jusoor
Attendees view art in Dubai at an auction hosted by Jusoor aimed at raising funds for Syrian students studying abroad on May 25, 2012.
“Jusoor has brought the Syrian community together behind a cause that everybody believes in: education,” explained New York based co-founder Rania Succar.
Their mission is to mobilize the expatriate community to invest in the next generation of Syrians who are studying or want to study abroad.
“We asked what we could do in the shortest possible time to help make that happen. It was so hard to get involved at the time. Jusoor was a way for us to make a difference in the short-term as well as the long-term,” said Succar, a Harvard graduate, over the phone.
Members provide mentorship for those who want to study overseas and need guidance, they raise emergency funding for those caught midway through their foreign studies with no access to funds due to sanctions and job loss, and solicit scholarships for talented students who face a life of fear and danger if they stay home. In order to raise funds, they held an auction of donated Syrian artwork in Dubai and have reached out to potential donors.
The mentorship program, which is currently working with about 90 applicants, matches Syrian students who want to study abroad with those who have already worked their way through the maze of standardized tests, college selection and visa applications to gain admission overseas.
“It is a very simple thing you are giving these students by joining the program: time,” said Ismail.
Jusoor’s Emergency Aid program has had the largest impact. Jusoor has partnered with the Institute of International Education to raise $50,000 to support 50 Syrian university students studying in the U.S. with emergency financing to help them continue their education when the crisis in Syria undermined their financial support.
“It has been the most impactful thing we have done,” said Ismail.
‘Syrian students are not left alone’
Mohamad Al-Tabbakh, a 28-year-old graduate student from Aleppo, received emergency funding to continue his emergency management studies at Arkansas Technical University.
“When Jusoor provided this scholarship it was in a very professional way. They did not ask what my attitude to the crisis was, or my background. It was given to me as a Syrian student only, without any other considerations. That was wonderful. For me as a student, Jusoor and the emergency funding they provided made me feel like Syrian students are not left alone.”
For students like Ahmad, the opportunity to study in the U.S. is priceless.

Courtesy of Malda Takieddine
Malda Takieddine, a recipient of emergency education funds from Jusoor, attends graduate school in Seattle Washington.
"The U.S. provides the best education; it is advanced. Sadly in Syria the education is on a whole different level. Education is one of the reasons why the students were part of the [Arab Spring] uprising,” said Ahmad. “We demanded a better education. I am so happy to be able to continue in the U.S. and not lose this opportunity that I have right now.”
Ahmad returned to Syria shortly after the crisis began and took to the streets with other young protesters in the struggle for a better quality of life.
“As a student I was part of the uprising in Syria. We were peaceful protesters; the only thing I took to the street was a bottle of water, so that I would never lose my voice.” Ahmad was fortunate and left Syria before the situation deteriorated. He has not been able to return since.
Al-Tabbakh would like all Syrians to share the freedom he now enjoys in Arkansas. “In America I am free, I can do anything. Here I have the freedom Syrians are fighting for.”
Malda Takieddine is trying to look beyond the bombed-out buildings and besieged neighborhoods in Syria to a day when she can help create a lush and landscaped future for her country. Takieddine, a 25-year-old graduate student studying landscape architecture at the University of Washington, also received emergency aid from Jussor.
“I will return to Syria after things calm down. I want to work in landscape architecture. We [Syrians] definitely need this,” said Takieddine. "This is the only thing we can do now. The most important thing for Syrian people is to build our education in order to build our future. It is crucial to the process of development.”
Along with Al-Tabbakh and Ahmad, Takieddine intends to join the mentorship program to help other hopeful applicants have the same chance at a bright future, despite a bleak present.
NBC News Charlene Gubash contributed to this report.
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Why does Obama and Screen names like "bain capital = ROBME !!!!" think being successful in the private sector is a disqualification to be President? Their comments remind me of the thinking of Lenin, Marx, Pol Pot, Mao and Stalin > Kill off those who are successful in the private sector to attempt complete Government control of our lives.
PS, if these Syrian Students are successful in the private sector in the future, the likes of Screen Names such as "Bain Capital - ROBME" will want to tax them into bankruptcy
I hope these students one day return to a Syria where total the remains of this nazi like regime of Assad Sr, and Assad junior are washed away from the country.and the leaders and other collaborators meet the same fate as the German nazis..death by hanging or very long prison sentences..And at the same time the elimination of the Islamic terrorists in their country.Then a secular,pluralistic Syrian society based on human rights and tolerance for ALL religions may be come a reality. Recognition of Israel and all other international agreements For the good of the mideast and the whole world!
Kirt's comments are weak to say the least. The commies killed off intellectuals, doctors and lawyers, free thinkers and anyone who didn't conform. What world history classes did you attend, Rabbit Hash High?
these students think that they will go back to Syria when all that @!$%# ends!! The sons and daughters of the aristocracy will never go back. They should count themselves lucky to have escaped when they did. When the revolution is finished, i am sure there will be little room for those who fled.
Many Pakis came to the US, Britain and European with similar dramas like Ayham Ahmad. Once they settled, they got the whole bunch of their families from Pakistan including uneducated liabilities.
These days even air travel has become difficult in the US!
See the damages they have done!
???? (Jonathan-1982062)
well I am very glad this guy getting an education , But if you are 26 in Syria and you have not finished college your asss would have been in the army , and the story about poor education in Syria , well sorry that's another lie , the level of education in Syria is just as high or higher than here , or this @!$%# could not go to Syracuse , But you know , with all the lies about what's happening in Syria , I guess one more lie its not going to make that much deference . ask him how much money he got for the story , I do not think he needs jeesoor or what ever the hell the org. name is .
Sunni Saudi, Kuwaiti, UAE and other Arab League bigoted barbarians and beasts could spend monies on education in the ME instead of funding their hate preaching and killer training Salaffi and Wahhabi mosques all over the world.
Have these Saudis and co done anything useful since their Islamic cult was born?
When most don't care for religion much these days, followers of Islamic cult, especially Sunni Saudi inspired Islamic radicals and militants (al-Qaida, Salaffi, Wahhabi, MB and other label ones), are fast marching backwards to their seventh century desert tribal days of rapings, lootings, killings and genocides of non-Muslims.
In Syria, they are behind the killings of Muslims.
Can't these bigoted Sunni Saudi beasts tolerate a far better leader Assad?
See the damages they have done in Iraq!
If Muslims have any enemies then it is these Saudis and Pakis.
You have authority with what is happening there? @ my turn - 5304605
Thanks to the WHite House Kenyan with his 102 Un Cons titutional SOcialist CZARs Syria, Libya(US Troops guard and make certain Communist Chinese oil is exported for them) and Egypt: all overthrows directed by the Muslim himself and who has appointed yet another Un Cons titutional Socialist CZAR to distribute directly to all three Black Muslim Brotherhood JIHADIST US Tax Dollars of course just printed as USA's monitized debt to guaranteed bankruptcy... What a contribution?
And this is a JOB for the UN! Send them not anymore of our US Citizens while you dare welcome and reward ILLEGALs ILLEGITIMATES the DREAM ACT or seats in our Colleges that our DEAD US MI*LITARY earned...now seated Criminals rewarded.
US troops now in 4 African countries to fight LRAPublished February 22, 2012 AP NAIROBI, Kenya -- A top military official says that U.S. troops are now deployed in four central African countries as part of U.S. efforts against a brutal rebel group called the Lord's Resistance Army. Rear Adm. Brian L. Losey, the top U.S. special operations commander for Africa, said Wednesday that U.S. troops are now stationed in bases in Uganda, Congo, South Sudan and the Central African Republic. The U.S. announced in October it was sending about 100 U.S. troops -- mostly special operations forces -- to central Africa to advise in the fight against the LRA and its leader Joseph Kony. Losey said officials are already seeing a decrease in the lethality of LRA actions, which he thinks is part of the pressure the U.S. and partner countries are applying.
Why are we BROKE: the above has a lot to do with this admin spending more than all prior admins together =and yyet you fools continue to bow to him...its your eternal soul--not mine!
How about your campaign promise GET US MILITARY OUT OF IRAQ: tell that to my neighbors children: no dad--but IRAQ can use his Military Skills...some promise
I.D.I.O.T.
critical times hard to deal with, will be here.
Just recall the case of new face of Sunni Islamic extremists Salaffi, MB and others, Morsi in Egypt!
Are education of any use to such one-way traffic Islamic religious Nazis?
Just a reminder that we Americans have a precious country that foreigners sometimes appreciate even more than we do. America still remains a beacon of light to millions abroad. Let's put aside our political differences and focus on this great gift of a country.
Yeah, they ought too. Getting the fruits of our labors for free.
...Dog: From what I understood in the article, the Syrian ex-pats are footing the bill; not "us". How about supporting their desire for freedom? They know that without unfettered, academic freedom in their education, they'll only remain "sitting ducks"/"fish in a barrel"; easily eliminated if they don't collaborate to get out of that position.
They're going to reap the fruits of their labors--but not for free. We didn't get ours for free, either. The Syrian ex-pats learned that from our historical struggles for freedom. Maybe we need a refresher course, ourselves?
I agree with 90caliber; we need to remember to appreciate what we have, and make sure that we go back to keeping it intact. The Syrian ex-pats and their students deserve to be supported in their effort to accomplish the goals of freedom.
dont go back. some nut job will see that your helping and lop your head off.
we need no more arabs asians or africans-from anywhere
This kind of story just tics me off. My daughter, born and raised in the USA, as was i 68 years ago and my grandparents over 100 years ago. These fn foriegns come over here and can get all kinds of money for their education, but an American citizen too bad. This $hit needs to stop!!!!!
You do understand that the "all kinds of money" is coming from Syrians, correct?
I don't think America should allow foreign students. We keep teaching them and they use that education against us. Teach them to build bombs, and they bomb us. Teach them to build missiles and they throw them at us. Maybe this is another case of using that education against the teachers.
90caliber You have a really "energetic" out-look and I, too, am "all for the best". We have a lot of work to do in this country, though! Their is MUCH -injustice-/
unfortunately after he returns to Syria he will be protesting the US. He should return and meet his obligation to join the army there.