Ah, the life of a young brown Muslim woman living in the City of Ottawa, Ontario. My name is Choukri Ali, and I was born in the neighborhood of Vanier to a Somali Muslim father, Ahmed Ali, and a Pakistani mother, Amina Khan. I'm used to people looking at me and my family. You don't see a lot of African Muslim men with South Asian wives, so my parents and I got a lot of stares wherever we went. Doesn't bother me because the opinions of bigoted white people, the world's fastest shrinking demographic, don't matter to me.
I am a student at the University of Ottawa, studying civil engineering. Being a minority and a female in this male-dominated and lily-white field isn't easy, but I've never been the type to let any of that stop me. In my classes, I routinely outperform the white dudes, and they both hate me and grudgingly admire me for it. The world is changing and a lot of these pale goons have no clue how to deal with those changes.
In the City of Ottawa, if you're smart and you don't look like them, they have a problem with that. Trust me, the aging white men and women working in Canadian government offices downtown have a real problem when it comes to diversity, even though they hide their bigotry behind their phony smiles. Unlike a lot of minority students at the University of Ottawa, I know how the game is played. Trust no one, and study the strengths and weaknesses of both friend and foe because, ultimately, they're all out to get you. Welcome to Ottawa.
Recently, I landed an internship with Mon Engineering, one of the top general contractors in the City of Ottawa. They handle half the construction downtown. When I arrived at their office, everyone stared at me. I was expecting it because I am a tall, curvy and lively, brown-skinned woman who wears the Hijab. If I ever showed up at a place full of white people and they didn't stare at me, I'd actually be worried. Getting stared at is the norm when you're a minority in the capital. Welcome to my life.
I spoke to Aries Mulligan, the Director of Operations for Mon Engineering, and he was pleasant enough. I got the internship and they kept me around for six weeks. In the end, I got the recommendation and the signatures I needed, along with the magical words "work experience" stamped on my academic record. Most other interns in the civil engineering department got to spend at least eight weeks with the real-world firms they were sent to, but hey, I am who I am and I knew what I was up against from the get go. Yeah, I am a bit cynical and a little jaded. Given my life, can you really blame me?
My parents are quite demanding, and as much as I love them, sometimes I feel burdened by the sky-high expectations of the very couple that brought me into the world. My father Ahmed Ali often told me how he came to the City of Ottawa, Ontario, from the City of Mogadishu, Somalia, in the 1990s with nothing. Dad went to school and paid for his engineering studies at the University of Ottawa by working at the local Canadian Tire Store. That's where he met my mother, actually.
My mother, Amina Khan, moved to the City of Ottawa, Ontario, from the City of Jamrud, Pakistan, with her mother, Bushra Khan. At the time, Mom was studying business administration at Carleton University and worked as a cleaner at Canadian Tire to help pay for school. When my father and mother met, even though they came from different worlds, it was love at first sight. I bet it was.