From Syria, Syria/ Dara'a; seeking Undergraduate degree in Doctor of Pharmacy and is enrolled at Zarqa University.Β Β
My name is Dania Alkhutaba. We live with our mother in the al-Zaatari camp since 2012.
I scored 88.4 on my Tawjihi diploma and owe my success to the support I got from my family.
We endured tremendous pain. We lost everything, our home, our livelihood, and our country.
But we did not despair. We felt that the best way to overcome our circumstances is through education. I want to become a pharmacist.
I was 12 years old when we arrived at Al-Zaatari. Zaatari's living conditions were very harsh. but these conditions did not prevent me from succeeding in school.. I have always been an achiever in school, I earned got the highest grades in the class and received many awards.
I played soccer and was the captain of my team.. I was the spokesperson for my friends in the camp, led discussions and raised issues of concern to my community.
I took part in many NGO activities in the camp. I acted in plays focusing on community development themes, to combat and change subversive behavior patterns.
We focused on early marriage, gender-based violence, child abuse, child labor, and sexual harassment... I also participated in school initiatives to encourage school enrollment for dropout students, to teach time management and to clean the environment. I improved my computer certificate and learned to play the Organ.
I owe my success to my motherβs daily sacrifices. She was our breadwinner. She had to work daily to provide for us. She is our role model and the reason why there is hope in our lives. My mother taught us how sacred is her sacrifice, and the least we can do is to succeed so that we can achieve our goals that she worked so hard for us to achieve.
I am one step away from achieving my dream. I will be the first female college graduate in my family.
I want to be independent and to be the master of my own destiny. I can do that if I have a solid career.
I have full confidence in my ability to succeed. I know the way and hope to find the support that matches my ambitions With your help, I hope I will be able to.
Dream and Mission Statement
My name is Dania Mohammad Alkhutaba. I have three brothers and three sisters. We live with our mother. My father did not leave Syria. I scored 88.4 on my Tawjihi diploma, and
I owe this to the support I got from my family. We arrived in Al-Zaatari on 21/9/2012.
We endured tremendous pain. We lost everything, our home, our livelihood, and our country.
But we did not despair. With little but ourselves to depend on, we felt that the best way for our country to rise again is for us to be educated so that we can rebuild it. I want to become a pharmacist.
I was 12 years old when we arrived at Al-Zaatari. There were no schools. Zaatari's living conditions were very harsh. It is extremely hot in the summer and very cold in the winter. I was determined to succeed in school regardless of these conditions.
My family stood behind me. I was admitted to the school. Ever since I was in sixth grade, I earned the highest grades in the class. I played soccer and was the captain of my team. Our team participated in many tournaments. I was the spokesperson for my friends in the camp. I led discussions and raised issues of concern to my community.
I took part in many activities supervised by NGOs in the camp. I acted in plays focusing on community development themes, combatting and changing subversive
behavior patterns. We shed light on the ills of early marriages, gender-based violence, violence against children, child abuse and child labor and sexual harassment.
Our initiatives were simple but their effectiveness and social return were great. I also participated in school initiatives to encourage school enrollment for dropout students, time management and cleaning the environment.
I registered for computer training and earned the ICDL certificate, English language courses, and learned to play the organ.
Camp conditions have been on the decline, particularly in winter. We have continuous power outages, which make it very difficult for us to study. However, I continued to excel in my studies, and my teachers and school administrators recognized this excellence. I received many awards documenting my achievements.
I attended regular school (Bahraini school) and Relief International Remedial Education Program at Zaatari to make up for what I missed in school. This meant that I had to spend 8 hours away from βhomeβ, and go back to study to get excellent grades. My hard work paid off eventually.
I owe my success to my motherβs daily sacrifices. She was our breadwinner. She had to work daily to provide for us. She is the backbone of the family. She is our role model and the reason why there is hope in our lives. She is the source of our strength and the reason we were able to go on and make the best out of our displacement and predicament.
My mother taught us how sacred is her sacrifice, and the least we can do is to succeed so that we can achieve our goals that she worked so hard for us to achieve.
I am one step away from achieving my dream. I want to become a pharmacist. I want to be independent and to be the master of my own destiny. I can do that if I have a solid career.
By being a pharmacist, I can be of help to others. I can work in pharmacology and do research to invent cures to save peoplesβ lives and promote their healing from diseases.
I want to attend Al-Zarqa University, School of Pharmacy. Tuition is 5,750.00 Jordanian Dinars. It is a five-year program. Syrian students usually get a discount.
I am an achiever. I want to continue to excel. I love my field of study and feel that studying is in itself a career. I want to be a career woman and do not want to stay at home. I will do everything I can to triumph over my circumstances. With your help, I hope I will be able to.
Why Would Donors Fund You?
I hope to receive funding because I drew hard in the secondary tile to get a seat for study in the university and because I was also the first girl in our home to attend university. I want to complete my education so that I secure my place in society as a woman to help my community. The income of my family is limited and not enough to support my tuition because the only person who works to secure the needs of our household is my mother. My mother's dream of being a student and completing her studies at the university never came true, so I hope I will achieve her dream, to help bring the burning she always experienced home to her finally, through her daughter.
How Do You Plan to Payback?
Pharmacy is a humanistic profession that connects the student with the science of pharmaceutical culture and the love of helping others. It serves our passion for the love of medicine, knowledge of the composition of medicines, the source of their origins and how to deal with them closely, and the knowledge of how to present them to others according to need and age group.
It is a humanitarian service, providing collective cooperation and active participation to ensure the needs of the individual and society with transparency and flexibility.
Volunteer Work/Social Capital
In the years of study, the children of the living were coming to home until they helped them write their daily duties, especially in English and on the street they were calling me to the garage of Dania I was very screwing it, and when he worked a lot of awareness of the audience and participated in the creation of many graphics for the teacher and others because I was apparenting the drawing and writer with a beautiful and harma and also in the team, the team of the Zaetry is very large needed the aims that a I have an effective element.
Dania Alkhutaba
thank you β€οΈ
noura. tv
Good luck β€οΈ