rael’s
This is
the inspiring story of an Israeli Bedouin who overcame social and physical
obstacles to achieve his dream. For full article read
here.
Among
the graduates receiving their doctoral degrees at Ben Gurion University of the
Negev on Wednesday, one stood out above the rest.
Ramadan
Abu-Ragila, 34, has muscular dystrophy, a degenerative disease that results in
increasing weakening and breakdown of skeletal muscles. He is wheelchair bound
and relies on an oxygen machine to breathe. A Bedouin, from the town of Segev Shalom,
southeast of Beersheba, Abu-Ragila has just completed his doctorate in physics,
specializing in the diffusion of water particles.
“I felt
enormous satisfaction at achieving a goal and reaching a far off point that I
had set for myself,” Abu-Ragila told Tazpit Press Service (TPS).
Abu-Ragila
said he set that goal for himself back in high school. “People told me that
physics was a very tough subject, so I decided to pick it as a major. I thought
it would be very challenging, but challenges are not something I shy away
from.”
Abu-Ragila
didn’t face those challenges alone. His brother Jihad, who is two years younger,
took it upon himself to help his elder sibling achieve his goals.
“One day
I saw Ramadan sitting at home. He told me he had enrolled to study nuclear
engineering at university, but didn’t have a way to get to Beer Sheva. I
decided I would help him, and from the first day of his first degree, right
through to his doctorate I accompanied him. He was the brains and I supplied
the legs,” said Jihad.
Ramadan
says the switch from the sheltered life of a small Bedouin village to the world
of academia was not an easy transition. “At the beginning it was very
difficult, the first month, the first year. They were really hard,” Abu-Ragila
recounted.
“I
understood that the transition from high school to academia was not at all
simple. But thankfully I had a very supportive environment. My brother Jihad,
my family and friends. Slowly I got used to it. My success is their
success,” he says.
Overcoming
Hurdles in Life
Abu-Ragila
steers away from talking about how he coped with his deteriorating physical
condition alongside the rigorous demands of his academic chores. All he is
willing to say is that he never received any special provisions and was always
taught to believe in his abilities “until I believed in them myself.”
His
experiences have taught him one central lesson in life: “Whoever you are and no
matter what path you choose, there will be always be hurdles. It is our duty to
strive to overcome them.”
Having
achieved his goal, Abu-Ragila isn’t about to stop there. He has already
enrolled for post-doctoral study at Haifa’s Technion-Institute of Technology.
“From my perspective the next stage for me is to serve the academic community
and to continue to develop my field of research in order to serve humanity.”
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