Ms Masad Alfayadh |
Monash University medical student Ms Masad Alfayadh was awarded a prestigious Westpac Social Change
Fellowship last week, acknowledging her work at Happy
Brain Education, a
not-for-profit organisation she co-founded that is changing the lives of young
Australians through education.
A final year
medical student at the School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health
(SCS), Masad is one of ten social
innovators to receive a Westpac Social Change Fellowship, valued at up to
$50,000, through the Westpac Bicentennial Foundation.
Masad tutoring HBE students |
In
2015 Masad co-founded Happy Brain Education (HBE), a not-for-profit mentoring
and tutoring organisation that aims to empower young people through education
and personal development.
“Currently,
there are three HBE branches, one for youth in Melbourne’s
Broadmeadows,
another for youth in the Dandenong area, and a third which focuses solely on
students from refugee backgrounds,” said Masad.
Masad
said, apart from completing her medical training, her biggest focus in life is
empowering young people experiencing social disadvantage, financial
disadvantage and mental health issues.
“I
think our world could be a much better place if young people are empowered and
supported and involved as active participants in society—I guess this belief
comes from personal experiences and my experiences growing up.”
In
2003 when she was 10 years old, Masad and her family arrived in Australia as
refugees from Iraq.
“I
only knew four words of English, and I felt very overwhelmed, alone and
scared,” said Masad.
Just
five months later, Masad’s father was tragically killed in a car accident,
creating even more hardship for her family.
Masad believes that education
changed her life.
“The opportunities,
self-worth and affirmation that came from my schooling were extremely
empowering,” said Masad.
“Education opened
up so many doors to me, and made me understand the world. I know that it can
help many other children who come from a similar background to me. It can
empower, encourage, and open many doors for them too.”
Masad’s Westpac Fellowship will enable her to complete a
Certificate of Social Innovation and Entrepreneurship at Stanford University, a
Graduate Certificate in Social Impact at Swinburne University and two
courses at the University of Oxford, one on global social movements and another
in management. She also hopes to use the scholarship to volunteer with
Medecines Sans Frontieres and to further her charity work to help more people around
Australia.
“Young
people have the power to change the world. They just need to be empowered and
supported,” said Masad.
“They’re the greatest supervisors anyone could
ever ask for!”
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