Move to L-A helped Kenyan with academics

BIDDEFORD — Edward Little graduate Mustaf Shariff, who plans to become a doctor, remembers when he decided to make something out of his life.

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Jose Leiva/Sun Journal

Edward Little High School graduate Mustaf Shariff now attending the University of New England in Biddeford with plans to become a doctor.

He was a high school sophomore in his first honors class.

“I looked to the kid to the left of me and thought, 'What's the difference between me and this kid?'” Shariff said. “There was no difference between what he was getting and what I was getting, so there was no excuse for me to settle for less. I challenged myself that day. That was my moment.”

Shariff said he had two phases of high school. In the first, he took easier classes. “I just wanted to get by and play basketball.” In the second, he took harder classes. Basketball was important, but so was academics, college and what he'd be doing after college.

Shariff, 20, credits his father moving the family to Lewiston-Auburn as one reason why he's where he is today, a third-year student at the University of New England.

His family left Kenya in 1996 for Boston. In 2001 they moved to Lewiston, a move he was unhappy about.

“We said, 'Why did you bring us to Lewiston out of all places? There's nothing to do here.' I'd rather be walking the streets of Boston hanging out with my friends. It made no sense.”

Later it made sense. It was easier to do well in Lewiston-Auburn schools than in big-city schools with distractions like gangs and crime. Maine is what Shariff calls “an academic state,” a place where teachers care whether students learn. In Boston the priority of some teachers was “to get through that year with nobody attacking them,” he said.

His decision to become a doctor came from different life experiences, Shariff said.

The first was in the refugee camps in Kenya. He and other children watched “Rescue 911” when they could get to a television. Shariff didn't understand much about the show, but he knew people were helping others. “I loved this,” he said. “That planted a seed. There's a verse in the Koran that says if you save one life, it's like you've saved all mankind.”

Later in Lewiston, he went with his father on a doctor's visit. “The way the doctor treated my dad … It was a warm, caring. It hit a soft spot.” He decided that someday he'd treat people like that.

In the summer of 2008, Shariff visited his sister in a village in Kenya. The days were long and hot. “I was bored out of my mind.”

He went to a small clinic where one doctor was trying to treat many patients. He explained to the doctor he was a medical biology student from the United States and asked if there was anything he could do to help?

The doctor's facial expression “was like, 'Thank God,'” he said. Shariff proudly put on his scrub and went to work dispensing medicine and testing patients for HIV/AIDS.

He worked 11-hour days. He was tired. But helping patients “was incredible,” he said with a smile. “The books, the classrooms, the lectures are important. But without the patient experience you don't know what a doctor does. … It was another push to the right direction.”

In between his studies, Shariff said he's working on a mentor program, U-Lead, to have Somali college graduates mentor younger students. “We can be the doctors walking at Central Maine Medical Center, the engineers building city halls, the lawyers.”

When he becomes a doctor, Shariff said he's not sure where he'll go, but he's thinking about returning. He likes the idea of working where he knows the community and things people talk about. “I can say to my patients, 'EL and Lewiston are playing today,'” and they can predict who will win.

“One of my mentors told me, 'If you leave a community and don't come back, no one will ever know you were here,'” Shariff said. “That makes sense.”

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Displaying comments, from newest to oldest

Susan2's picture

It's great to see a Refugee

It's great to see a Refugee thank a country and realize how their lives have been changed for the good. To hear him want to emulate the TV show Rescue 911 and the doctor that treated his dad tells you how important the small things in life are to our personality.

Someone needs to open the eyes of the Somali that have come here and raped our systems, either thru Welfare or the Charity Schemes they seem to have perfected. Those are the stories  Americans will remember. The youth need to pay more respect to women in general, like their moms, their female teachers, and their sisters and other classmates. The boys need to forget the disrespect taught to them in their culture. Their culture they live in now is not that way, we are equals here. The people that act like that in America are very bad people. They need to not want to be in that category.

The Somali kids are exchanging Internet movies where they have actually taped their awful deeds to Americans on phones and other electronics. I have seen those movies that come from Illinois and Missouri.

This will get the Somali nowhere except to make Americans wish they never invited them here to treat our country and people the way they do. This comes back to bite the good Somali too. Why would we want to sacrifice our TAXPAYER money to a group that disrespects us and in many cases hates us? There needs to be more of them like Shariff and not the ones I read about here in the papers. Our FBI has better things to do than spend money and time on ungrateful Refugees.

Pay it forward like Shariff does.

Pirate's picture
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Susan, you are right on...on

Susan, you are right on...on both sides of the story. Good post.

Mema's picture
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How encouraging to hear of a

How encouraging to hear of a student who actually appreciates the opportunity to learn and give back to society.  I have recently read "Three Cups of Tea" and "Stones into Schools", by Greg Mortenson, American students are so privileged, they should be as thankful as this young man to have the gift of a free education.

Paris Patriot's picture

This is what our nation needs

This is what our nation needs more of......young doctors who are becoming doctors because they want to help patients! Good for Mustaf! As a supporter of the public insurance option and single payer, I would love it if these young doctors when they graduate are hired by hospitals, other doctors, or specialists who will pay them a living wage (say...$35-40,000/year) while their new employer pays off their school bill. That way, they won't feel the need to have to charge a large amount of money to their patients for care and will be debt free!

Good luck to you Mustaf! :)

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