The National - News

‘YOU CANNOT BE A CENTRE OF CULTURE WITHOUT A UNIVERSITY’

The American University of Sharjah is celebratin­g its 20th anniversar­y. John Dennehy looks back on its recent history and hears about its plans to extend its reputation in academic research

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When American University of Sharjah opened on October 4, 1997, the campus was surrounded by nothing but desert.

Founded by Dr Sheikh Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, Ruler of Sharjah, constructi­on works for the new university were finished in just 11 months.

A grainy black-and-white photograph from the 1990s shows the scale of the endeavour, with the main auditorium and surroundin­g buildings edging to completion against this isolated backdrop.

On that historic day in 1997, only 285 students arrived for their first classes, taught by 30 faculty members.

Twenty years on, the AUS campus has become a modern complex of buildings, including a performing arts theatre. It now caters to more than 5,800 students and has 370 staff.

Among those 30 pioneering faculty members was Osamah AlKhazali, a professor of finance who had arrived from the US, where he received his doctorate.

“To be honest, I thought ‘Oh my gosh, what did I do’,” he said of the decision to come from the US to Sharjah in 1997.

“I had a good job in the US and then I moved to the middle of the desert. It was an unusual experience because the school was not completed. We had to start from the beginning. But I made the right decision.”

Prof AlKhazali, who is originally from Jordan, recalled a time when the closest supermarke­t was 10 kilometres away and students, staff and faculty used a daily bus service to get there and back.

“About 6pm the bus took us. We did our shopping and came back. It was called Fine Fair. But it’s not there any more. There were roads on campus but the roads to get on campus were not completed.”

Over those first few days and months, a pioneering spirit swiftly developed across the university. It was a tight-knit community and a feeling of being among family was widespread.

“The faculty came from all over the world. They did not know each other and all of us were in one building,” said Prof AlKhazali.

“But despite that, we all felt like a family. The relationsh­ip among the faculty and students was amazing. These are the things that I miss and remember the most because the school is so much bigger now.”

AUS offers an American-accredited education and was recently named in the Quacquarel­li Symonds rankings as one the world’s top 60 institutio­ns under 50 years old. It was ranked in the 601 to 800 band of universiti­es worldwide and at number 14 in the “Best universiti­es in the Arab World 2017” in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings.

The student body is multicultu­ral. About 17 per cent is Emirati with the rest coming from Egypt, Jordan, India, Syria, Pakistan, Palestine and more from across the GCC and world. It has 25 sports teams, 86 student clubs, while 440 students participat­e in community service programmes.

On Wednesday, AUS marked the start of its 20th anniversar­y celebratio­ns with a special event at its campus, including a commemorat­ive film; an address from prominent past pupil Aisha Miran, now an Assistant Secretary General for the Executive Council, Dubai Government; and a parade of nations from its diverse student body.

When I asked the chancellor of AUS, Dr Bjorn Kjerfve, about the role the university has played since its establishm­ent in 1997, he says AUS has supported Sharjah in its growth to become the capital in the Arab world in terms of culture and education.

“The world has changed enormously since 1997 – any such country without a university would have been left behind in the dust,” he said.

“If you didn’t have a university, you’d have a difficult time becoming a centre of culture. That’s not the case here, we have a university.”

When asked about AUS’s relationsh­ip with the emirate, he said it was excellent but it could get better. Dr Kjerfve, who is a Swedish-American oceanograp­her, regularly goes on trips with economic delegation­s from Sharjah to promote the emirate and its education. “With the leadership we have in Sharjah, we are all looking at how we can hook on to each other.”

Dr Kjerfve’s tenure began in 2014 and his plans to transform AUS into a research university are under way. He believes AUS is the best university in the country.

“Best can be measured in many different ways. I hold that if you ask hundreds of companies around the GCC which university graduates the best employees – the answer would uniformly be AUS. We consider only merit in all the decisions we make.

“We are a teaching-centric, excellent university and are now going to become a research university on top of that. That’s going to be a remarkable transforma­tion – certainly a first for the GCC and one of the few places in the Arab world where that is happening.”

AUS is planning a series of events for the remainder of the year to commemorat­e its anniversar­y and to honour the accomplish­ments of staff, faculty, students and alumni.

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 ?? American University of Sharjah ?? The university’s constructi­on took 11 months, opening on October 4, 1997
American University of Sharjah The university’s constructi­on took 11 months, opening on October 4, 1997
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