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My Qatar Expedition


it begins
In the fall of 2002, my parents called a family meeting. Thinking that they were about to propose a family jaunt to see a play or some such entertainment, I entered ready to sign up for our next adventure. Little did I know just how big of an adventure we were in for.

"How would you like to own a pet camel?" my dad asked my sister and me. He and my mom exchanged quick glances, and shared a slightly nervous chuckle.

"Huh?" My sister and I had the same puzzled look on our faces.

"Carnegie Mellon University wants us to move to Qatar next fall and open a branch campus in the capital city, Doha."

Silence hit the room like an odd sort of bomb. After multiple fast heart beats, I was only just starting to understand what was going on, and my mouth was gaping as it failed to form words. My sister must have made sense of it much more quickly than me--she was getntly sobbing, saying that she didn't want to leave her friends, her house, her school, her home.

"Well, I suppose they have frisbees there," I said, only half-facetiously. My attempt to cut the tension didn't work too well. Time for me to do some serious thinking. It'll be my senior year. I don't want to leave my friends now! And I want to graduate from this school after dealing with it for 11 years already! But then, it would be an incredibly cool chance to get out of this bubble...

Eventually, cooler heads prevailed among the higher-ups, as they came to realize that starting a brand new college overseas would take more that just 9 months to set up. Thus, the project was pushed back to starting in the Fall of 2004. However, it was clear to my family that we had the chance of a lifetime to see the world.

I have since decided that I would really like to live there for at least a year, so all my college applications were done with the idea of deferring enrollment for a year. My father and I have both been spending quite a bit of time trying to learn what Arabic we can on our own--I'm slowly working through the alphabet, and we're shopping for an Arabic listening course.


Our eventual home.

As you can see, Qatar is amazingly small, but with an incredible coast line. I'm told that it's the most progressive of all the Middle East--women are encouraged to serve in politics and education; the country serves as the base for the Arabic free press, Al Jazeera; it is taking huge steps to reach friendly terms with the Western world; and it is supposedly the safest country in all of the Middle East.

All these things make me really anxious to get to the country and see it for myself. Thus is born my Qatar Expedition.



in the news
This is the earliest news story about Carnegie Mellon, Qatar, that I have found:

Carnegie Mellon hopes to open branch in Qatar

Friday, October 10, 2003
By Bill Schackner, Post-Gazette Staff Writer

As director of the Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon University, one of the nation's top campuses for that field, Chuck Thorpe has a job that would seem hard to leave.

But he soon may do just that, swapping his coveted campus post for a place in the desert as head of a new branch that Carnegie Mellon is negotiating to create in the Persian Gulf state of Qatar.

A foundation in the oil-rich nation has been offering big money to entice elite American universities -- Carnegie Mellon among them -- to establish programs for citizens in that country. And school leaders have decided that if the Carnegie Mellon branch materializes, they want Thorpe to head it, Provost Mark Kamlet confirmed yesterday.

Kamlet said the school hopes to strike a deal by year's end so that by fall 2004 the first 50 or so undergraduates working toward computer science and business degrees can enroll. The Qatar Foundation, headed by Sheikha Mozah Bint Nasser Al Missned, the wife of that nation's ruler, has said it will absorb costs to establish the branch.

Thorpe said yesterday he's excited about creating a new academic program and immersing his children in a different culture. But it also will be hard to leave the directorship of an institute he has been involved with since its earliest day. He arrived at Carnegie Mellon as a graduate student more than two decades ago.

"This has been my home," said Thorpe, 46. "I have the world's best job right now. The Robotics Institute is a cool place to be that continues to grow, continues to thrive, continues to do fascinating things."

A branch in Qatar would dovetail with a strategic push by Carnegie Mellon over the past several years to increase its international presence.

"It's a critical time and a very good time to be doing this," Thorpe said. "The Muslim world is changing and is watching the United States."

That said, it will not be the simplest spot for a university to expand. While some on campus view the endeavor with excitement, others are wary.

Even in a Muslim state so progressive that women run for office, those arriving from Oakland to teach or study would encounter a culture vastly different from theirs. And the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and war in Iraq have symbolized to some the potential risks.

Kamlet said the university has reached out to those with such concerns and others who might wonder if the venture would detract from affairs on the main Pittsburgh campus. He said it would not, and Thorpe said his time in that nation left him impressed with the people and confident of the safety.

"On the first trip that I took to Qatar, my wife was with me. We walked the streets and felt extremely safe," he said. "The university has done a very thorough job of thinking about security issues and every account that we have come up with says that this is a very safe place."

Cornell University now operates a medical college in the sprawling complex named Education City, which is being developed outside the capital Doha. Virginia Commonwealth University offers a fashion and interior design program for Qatari women, and Texas A&M University offers a program in petroleum engineering, Kamlet said.

The complex is intended to serve students from kindergarten through postgraduate studies.

Financial aspects of the deal are still being worked out. In the case of Cornell, the Qatar Foundation committed $750 million toward costs of the medical college.

Carnegie Mellon has embarked on various initiatives and offerings in spots like England, Germany, Greece, Singapore and Taiwan. Of late, the Qatar branch has evoked a range of reactions on campus, said Peggy Knapp, professor of English and chairwoman of the faculty senate.

Some see it as a chance to do good in Qatar and in the region while helping to internationalize the education available to students in Pittsburgh. Others note the risks in that part of the world and wonder if Carnegie Mellon might be doing the bidding of the current administration in Washington by helping to Americanize the Middle East.

"Certainly there are people who favor this very strongly and those who don't," Knapp said of the Qatar plan. "What the preponderance would be I don't know."


Bill Schackner can be reached at bschackner@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1977.

Well, that was in October. It's now Wednesday, 11 February 2004; the contract is signed; the new campus is all-but-official; and I'm getting ready to leave for Qatar this Saturday! I'm really, really excited. This is the pre-move trip, during which we're supposed to get a feel for the country, pick out a home, check out the city, see the new campus, etc. Hopefully, by the time I get back, there will have been an official press release for me to add here. Plus, I'm planning on coming home with a decent tan to make everyone in the school jealous.





My family: Hannah (sister), Chuck (dad), Leslie (mom), Leland (me)



email: leland@kfischer.com
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