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Stanford Muslim Student – A Role Model for Muslim Youth

Volunteer & Create A Better World

As a Stanford student, Zeshan Hussain found many ways to take part in public service projects near and far – on campus, at a high school on the other side of San Francisco Bay and at a tropical disease hospital in India.

In January 2016, along with other members of the Muslim Student Union (MSU) and other student groups, Hussain helped organize Syrian Refugee Awareness Week, which included a teach-in about the crisis, a benefit dinner to raise funds for the charity United Muslim Relief and a clothing collection drive in student residence halls.

The organization brought in Sana Khatib, a Syrian-American activist whose father is a former political prisoner and whose family fled Syria and the Assad regime when she was young.  Through a clothing drive the MSU also collected 500 pounds of clothing just on campus from students and faculty, an accomplishment Hussain described as “very heartening.”

“We wanted to raise awareness about the crisis and its history, and about the personal struggles of students who may be refugees, or students who have families that are refugees,” he said.

Throughout his senior year, Hussain traveled to Averroes High School in Fremont, California, to teach health modules under the auspices of the Muslim Health Collaborative at Stanford.

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Hussain helped start the group, which is primarily composed of medical students. The students first met at Jumu’ah, a congregational prayer held on Fridays in the sanctuary room of the Center for Inter-Religious Community, Learning, and Experiences (CIRCLE) on the third floor of Old Union.

“We designed the curriculum as well as the presentations,” he said. “So far I’ve taught modules on nutrition, drugs and alcohol and mental health. It can be very, very tough to get and keep the attention of high school students, but they ask great questions and, for the most part, are really curious about the topics. It’s been really fun.”

Earlier this year, Hussain volunteered at the Sir Ronald Ross Institute and Hospital of Tropical and Communicable Diseases in Hyderabad, India, where he spent his early years. (Hussain and his family immigrated to Ohio when he was in grammar school.)

At the hospital, Hussain put his computer science expertise to work – he is earning a coterminal master’s degree in computer science – by creating a prototype of a machine learning system programmed to predict the outbreak of malaria, under a grant from the Indian Institute of Chemical Technology, a national research center.

“I would love to go back and continue working on the system,” said Hussain, who also shadowed two residents on their patient rounds during his three-week stay at the hospital.

Read full story here.