Extraordinary Pakistanis — II

Imagine your masi’s child having the opportunity to study in a mainstream school, impact on her family this can have.

Here’s a radical idea: imagine your son and your driver’s son going to the same school and getting the same standard of education throughout their life. One man — Omer Mateen — is quietly brewing a mini-revolution in the heart of Karachi’s Khadda market to accomplish exactly that. “Everyone around me was so negative and used to complain about Pakistan all the time,” shares Omer, as he explains how it all started. “The funny thing is that these were people who actually had the power and resources to make a difference, but instead, they kept complaining. I was so angry at them for not doing anything that I actually began as a rebel. I asked myself, what can I do?”

“I quickly realised that I can’t start a revolution but I refused to be helpless,” reveals Omer. “So I decided to start something small and result oriented.” This thought has morphed into the Orange Tree Foundation, an organisation that fundamentally transforms the lives of the people it touches. Orange Tree provides Montessori education to children from low-income families for one year before helping them get admitted into mainstream schools like St Michael’s, Reflections, St Patrick’s, etc. with full funding and support throughout their educational career, including university education. Imagine your masi’s child having the opportunity to study in a mainstream school and the impact on her family this intervention can have. Orange Tree doesn’t just educate children, but also grooms them and their mothers to both survive and thrive in mainstream schools. “If we teach a child how to brush their teeth, we teach the mother the importance of the same thing so that the child is encouraged when he introduces new behaviours in his or her household,” Omer said. “Educating one child kick- starts a chain reaction that transforms a family for generations to come.”

“I quickly realised that you have to be cruel when you want to help others,” Omer says. “Education is everyone’s right so how should we choose which child to educate. If you try to help everyone, you will end up helping no one. We had to put in place a strict criterion to determine which families we could help. First, families must value education and both parents must, at least, be educated till fifth grade. The first year acts as a good filter for discipline and we’re able to screen out families that aren’t seriously committed to educating their children. We also make sure that we either take all the children from a family or none. We don’t want to be in a position where one child from the family ends up becoming a doctor while the other is a mechanic.”




“What makes me happy is when I see Orange Tree children standing a few feet away from my own children in lines at their school,” shares Omer.



Published in The Express Tribune, July 10th, 2014.

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