Family of high achievers choose law, health & education

Three siblings who travelled to Australia in the most treacherous of circumstances have become high-achievers in tertiary studies at Victoria University and in the community.

Mohammad, Ghanieh and Zahra Daghagheleh left Iran in 2013 with their mother and a third sister. Their father, who had completed the journey earlier, was being held on Manus Island.

The family made it to Indonesia, but were captured and imprisoned. They escaped six times and it was not until the seventh attempt that they were successful.

Although promised that they would be travelling to Australia on a sizeable ship and have their own bed, the Daghagheleh family found themselves crammed into an old wooden boat with about 130 others. There was no food, no water, no lifejackets, and no room to move or sleep. After three terrifying days, they were rescued by an Australian Navy boat. The family spent three months in detention centres and were transferred to Melbourne on bridging visas.

In Melbourne, the family thrived with all three children becoming outstanding students.

Ghanieh, the eldest, is passionate about medicine, health - and saving lives. "My long-term goal is to become a surgeon," she says. She has just received offers from two universities to study for a Doctor of Medicine.

Ghanieh is close to completing a Bachelor of Midwifery/Bachelor of Nursing at VU through the Asylum Seeker Scholarship Program and has been working at Royal Melbourne Hospital helping to care for ICU patients who have developed coronavirus symptoms. Ghanieh is the first asylum seeker refugee of Iranian heritage to qualify as a lifeguard in Australia and volunteers at Ambulance Victoria.

Zahra's focus is education. She completed a Diploma of Teacher Education Preparation (22451VIC) and applied for a scholarship to study a Bachelor of Education (P-12). She is now in the second year of the four-year course and hopes to follow it with a Master of Education. "After a few years of teaching experience, I would like to work in the Department of Education, Skills and Employment developing resources for teachers and other educators," Zahra says.

Mohammad became vice captain of his high school and graduated with academic excellence awards in three subjects and merits in two. He was a finalist in the 2020 National Photographic Portrait Prize, is an advocate for young asylum seekers' rights, and completed an Advanced Diploma of Legal Practice (22565VIC) at VU Polytechnic.

Mohammad has just been awarded a scholarship to study at the University of Melbourne and will be doing a Bachelor of Arts, majoring in Politics and International Relations. "I would love to work in the business law sector in the future. I aim to seek justice, promote equality and fight for the rights of our citizens," he says.

"It is remarkable to have three asylum seeker siblings all studying and achieving great results, particularly given the difficulty for asylum seeker and refugee students to access scholarship places," says Julie Madden, Refugee and Asylum Seeker Liaison Officer at VU higher education and TAFE.

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