Saad’s remarkable journey started in 2007, when emergency rule was imposed in Pakistan and he was thrust in the spotlight as the president of the Student Council at LUMS. A significant portion of the student community wanted to come out and protest but LUMS had no culture or history of mass political student mobilisation — precisely the reason countless parents had trusted the institution with grooming their children in the first place. Saad’s decisions in those fateful days could alter the very fabric and future of one of Pakistan’s leading universities. “My closest friends kept telling me this wasn’t my problem,” Saad recalls. “When I argued with them by saying I had the responsibility to lead and mobilise protests as the president of the Student Council, they advised me to resign and let someone else lead. ‘Police kai danday sai hi bat samajh aai gi tumhai’ they used to say.”
As the student protests swelled, the police registered an FIR against Saad and some of his friends stopped talking to him. His name started appearing in the newspapers and family members would call to blast him on the phone, arguing that ‘tum nai family ki naak katwa di.’ “This was a traumatic time for me personally even though I couldn’t show it publicly as I mobilised students on campus,” Saad remembers. Eventually, the then president Pervez Musharraf pardoned Saad and life began to return to normalcy, with a more powerful and effective Student Council than ever before as student agitation continued. When I ask Saad if he has any regrets, he says no, but then quickly changes his answer to add that he did have one moment of regret. “When I would talk to my parents and hear how worried they were, that’s when I would have second thoughts about what I was doing.”
At the end of LUMS, Saad was told to apply for the Acumen Global Fellows Programme but when he saw the profile of candidates that made it, he got intimidated. After a few years of working a ‘normal job to support his family’, Saad finally gathered the courage to apply for the fellowship and cleared the rigorous screening process. As part of his fellowship, Saad will now spend nearly a year in Tanzania where he will work with an organisation that generates electricity from rice husks in rural areas and then possibly bring this model back to Pakistan after his fellowship. In parallel, Saad is also working with a theatre group to try to secure funding for a movie on the impact of terrorism on education in Pakistan.
“If I didn’t have to support my family, I’d go into politics tonight and help solve Pakistan’s problems,” Saad shares. “But my family doesn’t have any political network or funding. So I try to make an impact wherever I can. I deprioritised marriage because it would take my energy away from making a difference. My family and friends think it’s an excuse and I’m just covering up some affair with a girl but I don’t know how to explain my goals to them.”
The purpose of this article is to find and share inspirational stories about everyday Pakistani heroes (if you know someone who should be profiled, send me a Tweet @Mbilallakhani). If we don’t share these stories about Pakistan, no one else will.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 3rd, 2014.
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COMMENTS (21)
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Just a query...how he felt after getting pardoned by the same guy he was protesting against. and in hindsight how he feels about the person he stood FOR in those "emergency" time. Not much related to the article but what a waste of his energies in 2007
Well done saad, but bilal (seriously) you should have talked to me for getting inspiration. Allah talla ke fazl-o-karam se, Pakistanis would have been more proud. But anyways, hope you find me soon enough :)
So what was extraodinary about him? Being in LUMS, leading a student body, getting selected in something unimportant or maybe some day understanding electricity generation from husk? By the way, the life of average rural middle class kid from Government school managing to get a decent education is a lot more inspiring to me than him..
@Zahra khan: Not trying to bring the guy down, shame on you actually to make it appear as if I'm trying to do something negative. My only point was whether getting an acumen fellowship such a big deal to be covered by an entire oped? I don't think so.
As for the guy, all my best wishes with Saad and i'm sure he'll do great. But I don't agree with this marketing by one of his friends in a national newspaper. Doesn't sound legit.
Proud to have known a guy like Saad Latif !!
Congratulations..
Excelling in their fields is a norm for Luminites. But Bilal you should have been mindful that three other luminites had also qualified for Acumen global fellow program earlier (including Faheem Shelot and Umer Ashfaq).
Ali Hamayon, it takes great nerve to pass judgments without even knowing what you're talking about. Please have a look at the Acumen foundation and read up on what it's all about. It's an organization that invests in people who have a plan to give something back to society. This man here, Saad Latif is going to Tanzania to work with an organization that generates electricity from rice husks and then he's going to come back to Pakistan and try to implement that system here. Shame on you for trying to bring down a man who is actually doing something and being funded by an organization who will make sure he makes a difference.
A tremendous feat by Saad. Beyond words, beyond thought and beyond imagination! But Bilal, I think deep down inside you know that such people like Saad belong to countries which are developed and corrupt free. His talent will really grow in those countries.
Haha Ali Hamayon, even if it is for a friend and even if people have done bigger things, I really don't see any harm in promoting a feel-good story.
Being a little subtle praising your friend in the article wouldn't hurt.
While, I agree that we should celebrate the good stuff Pakistani's are doing internationally, I'm not exactly sure what Saad has achieved so far. Leading a protest against Musharraf? So did thousands of other students. Being selected as an Acumen Fellow out of 1200 people? Pakistani kids getting accepted to Harvard, and Yale for undergrad, MBA and law school out of roughly 9000 students might be a bigger deal.
As far as the politics is concerned, some of the top politicians in Pakistan's parliament today do not come from a political background. The only ticket into politics is the courage to sacrifice whatever you have; family, wealth, and reputation. There is absolutely no excuse for not entering into politics.
Well done Saad. Well done Bilal too. Keep the great work up.
Why would he protest against Musharraf? what a waste..
That was an inspiring read.......the environment of patronage that presently exists would never allow someone like Saad Latif to gain a foot hold in the political arena but if somehow he did, he'd be like a fish out of water.
Heartening and brilliant. Yes, sadly, this is the first I have heard of him.
Certainly a very inpirational story. Kudos o saad and good on you to pulicize his achievement.
But there are many people that get selected to prestigious programs against tough competition. That does not automatically qualify them for the highest positions in the country as you seem to imply. To be PM of a dvierse country requires very different skills.
These students and similar student society members participated in the restoration of CJ ushering in the worst era of Pakistan. Most of them already realise this and few remaining will soon agree how they jeopardised by being part of that fabricated revolution.
Thanks for sharing Saad's story. It is inspirational indeed.
Well done Saad. I wish a few more young people like you are groomed here so as to improve the condition of this country. I think time has come for the youth to stand up and and take the responsibility of this country and drive it in the right direction. Wish you all the best Saad.
Extraordinary tale of an extraordinary person...MoshAllah brother Very proud of you!!