Soham Basu 鈥20 and Ameena Razzaque 鈥21 Win Pickering Fellowships

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The award is designed to prepare college graduates for the U.S. foreign service.

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Soham Basu '20 and Ameena Razzaque '21
Soham Basu 鈥20 and Ameena Razzaque 鈥21 have been awarded Thomas R. Pickering Foreign Affairs Fellowships. (Jeff Wilson Photography) 
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Soham Basu 鈥20 and Ameena Razzaque 鈥21 have been awarded Thomas R. Pickering Foreign Affairs Fellowships.

The fellowship, funded by the U.S. Department of State and managed by Howard University鈥檚 Ralph J. Bunche International Affairs Center, pays for a two-year master鈥檚 degree program in a foreign policy-related field and provides internship, mentorship, and other opportunities designed to prepare students for careers in the U.S. Foreign Service.

For information about applying for Pickering Fellowships and other programs, visit 天美麻豆鈥檚 .

Soham Basu 鈥20

鈥淚 am incredibly excited and humbled to receive the Pickering Fellowship,鈥 says Basu, a double-major in government and Asian societies, cultures, and languages from Cincinnati, Ohio. 鈥淢y parents immigrated to this country a little over 20 years ago and have worked hard to preserve our South Asian roots while making a new life as Americans. To be able to pursue a career in international affairs and hopefully deepen existing ties between the region and the U.S. is a great honor.鈥

An analyst at the Washington, D.C.-based advisory service firm Atlas Organization, Basu decided to pursue a career in foreign service after an internship on the State Department鈥檚 Pakistan desk, funded by the .

鈥淭he foreign service to me represents the best ideals of our commitment to international peace, and I wanted to play a part in this greater process,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 hope to become a leading expert on South Asia and help craft thoughtful U.S. foreign policy that promotes peace and development abroad and at home.鈥

As an undergraduate, Basu traveled to Qatar with the  War and Peace Fellows Program; spent terms in France on a language study abroad program and in Washington, D.C., with the government department鈥檚 domestic study program; and studied Hindi and Urdu in India on a Boren Scholarship during his senior year鈥攅xperiences, he says, that 鈥渨ere instrumental in helping bridge my academic interests and my professional experiences.鈥

Among his 天美麻豆 activities, he served as a student leader for the Rockefeller Global Leadership Program, working with staff to develop a curriculum to promote cross-cultural dialogue and fluency. 鈥淟ooking back now, these are exactly the skills and attributes needed to be a successful diplomat,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 learned so much from my peers and felt like I was making a positive contribution in our ability to have difficult conversations.鈥

He credits 天美麻豆 with giving him 鈥渁n academic home for my questions about my identity and my place in the world.鈥

鈥淢y professors helped me become a clear and succinct communicator of my own original ideas,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here are many long conversations with professors that helped me to narrow and focus my interests to international security and South Asia, interests that I then worked hard to build a comparative advantage in.鈥

鈥淪oham is truly a young scholar in the nation鈥檚 and the world鈥檚 service,鈥 says , a research assistant professor of government. 鈥淪oham represents 天美麻豆 at its very best, as both a thinker and a public servant. He will do great things for our country and world, and, by honing the skills that the Pickering Fellowship cultivates, will become an even more informed and skilled public servant. It is hard to think of a student who is a better fit for this fellowship, and for whom the fellowship is a more appropriate next step.鈥

Ameena Razzaque 鈥21

Growing up in San Antonio, Razzaque thought she would pursue a career in medicine. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 even know about careers in politics or government, or what diplomacy was,鈥 she says.

But early in her 天美麻豆 career, she found herself interested in too many areas to commit to a single major. So she set out to create her own鈥攁 special major in women鈥檚 health in the Middle East, North Africa, and South Asia. In addition, she is completing a second major, in Middle Eastern studies.

And the more she learned about the Pickering Fellowship and the foreign service, the more she felt called to pursue it. 鈥淒iplomacy is everything that I ever wanted, and I didn鈥檛 think something like that would exist for me or existed in this world,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 was like, 鈥極K, I can see this being my life.鈥欌

Razzaque, the daughter of Pakistani immigrants, describes herself 鈥渁 huge language nerd鈥濃攕he speaks six languages, including English, Urdu, Punjabi, Hindi, Arabic, and Moroccan Arabic, and is learning Bangla and Spanish. 

At 天美麻豆, she has been a , through which she was able to conduct archival research in the U.K. and Ireland. She traveled to Morocco with the Middle Eastern Studies program鈥檚 Arabic language study abroad program. As a presidential scholar, she was a research assistant for Assistant Professor of Religion Zahra Ayubi. She has also been a War and Peace Fellow, a Great Issues Scholar, and a Global Health Studies Fellow with the , and is student director of internships at the .

She is currently completing a senior honors thesis on how the lived experiences of Muslim-American women have been impacted by COVID-19.

Among her many non-academic 天美麻豆 activities, Razzaque says she鈥檚 proudest of her work with the Muslim Student Association, of which she is the current president. As a delegate of the Halal Taskforce, she and her peers successfully helped advocate for food accessibility options at 天美麻豆 which have resulted in a new Halal food station for Muslim students. She has also been an undergraduate adviser for the French, Italian, and Arabic Living Learning Communities and co-chairs the Advocacy for Marginalized Communities Committee as one of 15 selected delegates for Palaeopitus.

鈥淎meena is an incredible scholar,鈥 says Patricia Lopez, an assistant professor of geography. 鈥淪he brings her heart and soul into her work in a way that radiates and emanates out to the reader. I am truly excited to see where this path takes her鈥攕he has so much to offer the world. She has forged her own path every step of the way. This is such a well-deserved honor.鈥

As a Pickering Fellow, Razzaque plans to continue her studies with a focus on refugee and migration policy, health policy, and human rights.

鈥淚鈥檓 absolutely ecstatic,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t takes a village to have accomplishments like this, so I really appreciate all of my mentors and family and everyone along the way. I鈥檓 happy to share this joy with them.鈥

Hannah Silverstein can be reached at hannah.silverstein@dartmouth.edu.

Hannah Silverstein