Extraordinary Journeys: Stories of Refugees Fleeing Conflict and Shaping Global Health

March 5, 2025
6 - 8pm EST
Registration is required
This event is free

Who can attend?

  • General public
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Students

Contact

Global Health NOW & Johns Hopkins Center for Humanitarian Health
443-905-1556
Collection of five head shots of the speakers for the

Description

This special live storytelling event spotlights the remarkable experiences of refugees in the Bloomberg School of Public Health community.

Graduates from Afghanistan, Myanmar, South Sudan, Sudan, and Syria will share firsthand accounts of living and working amid humanitarian crises, fleeing conflict, and shaping impactful roles in public health. A reception will follow.

This is a hybrid event; to attend virtually, watch the livestream.

All are welcome for this evening of inspiring stories hosted by the Center for Humanitarian Health and Global Health NOW.

Featured speakers:

Kemish Kenneth Alier, from South Sudan, was the first recipient of the Peter Salama MPH Tuition Scholarship for Refugees. He lived in a refugee camp in Uganda for over two decades. After receiving a medical degree from Gulu University in Uganda, he returned to South Sudan, where he practiced clinically in a rural hospital before receiving his Master of Public Health (MPH) and Master of Business Administration from Johns Hopkins. He now works with the Center for Humanitarian Health, conducting research focused on health and nutrition in settings of conflict and displacement.

Hasina Alokozai had a prestigious career in public health in Afghanistan before her family was forced to flee the country amid the Taliban's return to power in 2021. She worked with UNICEF on nutrition programs in Afghanistan before receiving the Johns Hopkins' Peter Salama MPH Tuition Scholarship for Refugees.

Nan Aye Aye is a nurse who has worked extensively in humanitarian settings. After fleeing conflict in Myanmar as a child, she grew up in a Thai refugee camp. She earned her GED at a school for refugees before coming to Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health on a Peter Salama MPH Tuition Scholarship for Refugees. She currently works with a nongovernmental organization (NGO) helping refugees in the U.S. to access health care.

Houssam al-Nahhas has devoted his career to improving and protecting the health of Syrians affected by conflict in the country. He played a crucial role in providing medical care during Syria's uprising, where he was detained for providing these services. He was a 2019–20 Sommer Scholar and recipient of the Johns Hopkins' Peter Salama MPH Tuition Scholarship for Refugees. He works for Physicians for Human Rights, where he documents and analyzes attacks on health care.

Aseel Salih fled Sudan's civil war in 2023 after serving as one of the country's youngest government health official. In that role, she shaped COVID-19 policy and represented Sudan at multiple World Health Organization's World Health Assemblies, where she advocated for global health equity. At the Bloomberg School, she was a 2023–24 Sommer Scholar, focusing on health policy and pharmacoepidemiology. She continues her journey at the intersection of health policy and strategy at a pharmaceutical company.

Frances Stead Sellers (presenter) is an associate editor of The Washington Post and a host of the newsroomʼs live journalism platform, Washington Post Live. She is a frequent moderator of ideas festivals and has reported extensively on public health and disaster response. Sellers is a longtime member of the Center for Humanitarian Healthʼs advisory committee.

Who can attend?

  • General public
  • Faculty
  • Staff
  • Students

Registration

Registration is required

Please register in advance

Contact

Global Health NOW & Johns Hopkins Center for Humanitarian Health
443-905-1556