60 Stories for 60 Years
To meet these inspiring individuals, check here for a new story each week during the Jubilee year. On social media, you can like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter @AKAcademies.
Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Students, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Teacher, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Maputo |
Staff, Aga Khan Academy Network |
Alumnus, Aga Khan Academy |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Teacher, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Alumnus, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Alumnus, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Teacher, Aga Khan Academy Maputo |
Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Staff, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Teacher, Aga Khan Academy Maputo |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Teacher, Aga Khan Academy Maputo |
Teacher, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Alumnus, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Teacher, Aga Khan Academy Maputo |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Staff, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad
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Alumnus, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa
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Staff, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Parents, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa
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Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Teacher, Aga Khan Academy Maputo |
Alumni, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa
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Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa
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Alumnus, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Alumna, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Teacher, Aga Khan Academy Maputo |
Student, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Teacher, Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad |
Alumnus, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Felix Ngumo |
Samson Suhas |
Sazil Ramani |
Karishma Bhagani |
Alumnus, Aga Khan Academy Mombasa |
Khushboo Khoja |
Tvisha Devavarapu - Class of 2018 top scorer
Tvisha never shied away from sports and captained the Nizam house in her final year of school. She also loves reading and led the Academy's Modern Literature in Translations Club. At the same time, Tvisha was also excellent academically. “Football enabled me to balance my studies,” she says. “It was an exhilarating stress buster. I’ve never had more fun in school than whilst I was playing football.” She also attributes a lot of friendships she made to the game.
Tvisha joined the Academy in grade 9 because she felt that the school’s values aligned with hers. “The Academy’s mission statement offered a more promising and holistic learning experience compared to the other schools,” she said. Once at the Academy, Tvisha lapped up all she could of the IB curriculum. She enjoyed the objectivity in Biology and Maths classes, and also appreciated the nuances of History and English. She was an active participant in Theory of Knowledge discussions and service activities.
Tvisha volunteered at Teach for Change, an NGO that gave her the opportunity to teach at a public school. “I didn’t only aid the children with their communication and leadership skills but also worked on my own character and values,” she says of the experience. “I strengthened my commitment, resilience, and communication skills, learning to accept and react to challenges in a proactive manner.” Grade 11 students are actively encouraged to take part in summer service internships at locations across India, working with AKDN (Aga Khan Development Network) institutions and other non-profits. “The Academy has a very unique, highly diverse and multicultural environment,” says Tvisha. “This really played a role in enabling me to broaden my perspective through a cosmopolitan way of perceiving things.”
Tvisha is headed to pursue her undergraduate studies at the University of California, San Diego in September 2018. In the near future, Tvisha wants to focus on science and research. But in the long run, Tvisha wants to try her hand at teaching if she gets the chance. “This must surely be the impact of my experience at the Academy,” she says. “Spending time with people like Ms. Alex, I’ve seen the dynamics of the intersection between professional study and academics and how that enables a fuller scope for learning.”
Junior School newsletter - August 2017
Read the August 2017 edition of the Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad Junior School newsletter.
Senior School newsletter - August 2017
Read the August 2017 edition of the Aga Khan Academy Hyderabad Senior School newsletter.
Muriuki Njonjo (Class of 2017): Giving back through leadership and empathy
My goal in life has always been to be the very best version of myself that I can be. From the time I joined the Aga Khan Academy Mombasa for my International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma Programme to when I graduated, that was the greatest period of personal growth in my life. The Academy changed my way of thinking, my way of doing things and informed my purpose in life.
Through a strong emphasis on the intrinsic value of education, the Academy had a lasting impact on me. I remember fondly living in residences which undoubtedly prepared me for living away from home in university. Residential life helped form bonds of friendship that I can confidently say will last a lifetime. The wisdom of dorm parents like Mr. Dudi and Mr. Prashant always helped me get through the rough tides of the IB Diploma Programme, and their words are still very much applicable to my daily life today.
In many ways, the Academy added great intrinsic value to me. However, there was more to that. The Academy demands of all its students a contribution. We lived in a space where we all felt we had to bring something to the table to the benefit of the larger community. It was in this sense of collective responsibility that I found my niche as an active member of the AKA Mombasa community. I was privileged to serve the Student Council as Secretary of the Finance Committee, a role that made me a steward of the student body’s finances. Alongside my committee, I approved the allocation of roughly US$1000 towards various service projects organised by students which had an impact on the local Mombasa community. The importance of giving back and empowering the less fortunate is built into the very fabric of the Academy’s mission and that helped me develop a profound sense of empathy.
I had the opportunity to establish a service club known as the Leo Club with the help of the local Lions Club. We went ahead to raise money for corneal transplants. With the help of my mentors Adnan and Aalia Visram, I co-founded the Academy’s first ever TEDxYouth event with my friend Preyansh Kaushik. Through TEDx we provided an incredible platform for members of our AKA Mombasa community to share their unique perspectives with millions of people across the world. TEDxYouth@AKAMombasa remains one of my proudest achievements at the Academy. Alongside my friend Inaara Savani and the constant guidance and support of Ms Alex Holland, I organised a workshop for Year 9 students on the Syrian refugee crisis. This opportunity eventually led me to Uganda in the Summer of 2016, where I volunteered as an English teacher at the Kyangwali Refugee Settlement. I was also honoured to be the Finance Executive of the CanCare club which organises the Academy’s annual blood drive. All these incredible opportunities have taught me valuable skills and have made me a driven person. Of course, all this would not have been possible without the support of my peers and faculty members.
One cannot speak about their time at the Academy without mentioning the rigorous academics geared towards creating critical, analytical and reflective thinkers. It’s through Mr. Vlad’s classes that I discovered my passion for politics because of the power it has to effect change in everyone’s lives. The strength of the curriculum and the way the teachers delivered it definitely prepared me for university workload. This combined with the numerous opportunities to get involved afforded to me ultimately won me a full scholarship to the University of Waterloo in Canada where I am currently majoring in political science and financial economics with Honours.
I still carry the spirit of AKA Mombasa with me. Since joining Waterloo, I have been involved in the organisation of the annual TEDx event, I have delivered a start-up pitch for funding at Velocity, the world’s largest free business incubator, and I have been privileged to join the first incorporated blockchain community management firm in North America as the Head of Public Relations. For now, I will continue to do what the Academy taught me to do best: contribute to my community and live out my potential in my truest self. In future I hope to go back home to Kenya and use my education and skills to help make a difference in people’s lives. Until then, I continue to live in a permanent space of gratitude for the person I am today, which I owe to the Aga Khan Academy Mombasa.