Nigerian
genius, Saheela Ibraheem, 19, made history On Thursday, February, 26,
when she was honoured with an official reception in the White House by
the US President, Barack Obama and the First Lady, Michelle.
Saheela
Ibraheem got into the Ivy League Harvard at the age of 15, where she is
currently studying neurobiology — a branch of science that studies the
brain — and has been listed among the “World’s 50 Smartest Teenagers.”
She was also accepted for admission by 13 other top colleges in the
United States, including the MIT, Princeton, Columbia, and six Ivy
League institutions, choosing Harvard, she became one of the youngest
students to ever attend the university. She will be graduating in May
this year.
Speaking
after an introductory speech by Ibraheem at the White House, President
Obama stated that “there are a lot of teenagers in the world. Saheela is
like one of the 50 smartest ones. That’s pretty smart. And she’s a
wonderful young lady. She’s like the State Department and the National
Institute of Health all rolled into one. And we are so proud of your
accomplishments and all that lies ahead of you. And you reflect our
history. Young people like you inspire our future.”
Ibraheem,
who skipped two grades in school, said the key to success is figuring
out what you love to learn as early as possible, which she did at the
young age of five.
“If
you are passionate about what you do, and I am passionate about most of
these things, especially with math and science, it will work out well,”
she told CBS 2s Cindy Hsu. In addition, Ibraheem speaks four languages
that include Arabic, Spanish and Latin.
Her
mother, Shakirat Ibraheem, said her daughter has been way ahead of the
academic game since kindergarten — never cutting corners and trying to
do everything on her own. “She’s like always independent,” she said. “I
never get to help with her homework because she’d say ‘it’s my work
mommy, not yours.’”
Ibraheem’s
recognition and reception was part of the “Black History Month”
celebration in the US, which comes up in February. The “Black History
Month”, takes root from the activities of the “Association for the Study
of African American Life and History.” Every year, Americans set aside
the month of February to celebrate the central role that
African-Americans have played in every aspect of American life
especially the march for freedom and equality, jobs and justice, the
Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act, and some profound contributions
African-Americans make in the American culture.
Present
at the evening event were members of the US Congress, including Leader
Nancy Pelosi, and members of the Congressional Black Caucus.
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