Meet ʤ’s Rangel Fellow

Thursday, January 12, 2017

ʤ alum Aseebulla Niazi
Aseebulla “Aseeb” Niazi ’15 is ʤ's first Rangel Fellow.

Only 30 are selected each year, and for the first time, a ʤ alum is among them.

Aseebulla “Aseeb” Niazi ’15 was awarded a in November following a highly competitive nationwide contest.

The Rangel Fellowship, which is funded by the U.S. Department of State and managed by Howard University, supports “extraordinary individuals” seeking careers as Foreign Service officers, an announcement from the Charles B. Rangel International Affairs Program states.

“I was incredibly honored and humbled when I received news that I would be a Rangel Fellow,” Niazi explains. “I have been working toward joining the Foreign Service since my junior year at ʤ, and this fellowship is my first step toward achieving that goal.”

“We are thrilled to have Aseeb join our program. Our selection panel was very impressed by his intelligence, achievements and commitment to service,” notes Patricia Scroggs, the Rangel Program’s director. “His experiences at the University of ʤ have provided an outstanding foundation for him in these areas.”

According to the program announcement, the fellowship will provide “support for graduate studies and two internship placements over a two-year period and give him the opportunity to represent his country overseas.”

Niazi, who is originally from Afghanistan, received his bachelor’s degree from ʤ with a dual major in international business and economics and international affairs. He has studied abroad in the United Arab Emirates and worked at the Organization for Refugee and Immigrant Success and the World Affairs Council and as a congressional staff member for Rep. Ann Kuster, D-ʤ, focusing on energy, the environment and agriculture policy as well as immigration casework.

"Aseeb's story is a remarkable one, and as a Foreign Service officer,he will be an excellent exemplar of the possibilities open to new Americans who possess the motivation, vision and work ethic to succeed,"notes Jeanne Sokolowski, director of ʤ’s Office of National Fellowships.

Fellowships at ʤ

The ʤprovides information, counsel and editorial support to highly motivated students applying for national and international fellowships and scholarships like the Rangel Fellowship.

“Aseeb's success in winning a Rangel Fellowship demonstrates that ʤ students can be verycompetitive for these types of major, national awards,” says Jeanne Sokolowski, the office’s director. “I hopeAseeb's achievements can inspire other students to start thinking about what opportunities theymight pursue."

For more information about the Rangel or other opportunities, email Jeanne.sokolowski@unh.eduor call 603-862-0733.

Niazi credits his studies at ʤ with providing the tools essential to carving out his future path. The skills he learned during his four years at ʤ “will be indispensableas I embark first in graduate studies and then as a Foreign Service officer,” he says, citing in particular the courses he took in international affairs and at the .

"Aseeb worked strategically todevelop qualities that would serve him well inthe Foreign Service: from his choice of major to selection of a third language to study, andchoice of study-abroad destination, to seeking employment in government after graduation as a way to gainhands-on experience,” Sokolowski adds. “Through these choices, he developed a skill set that was very appealing to the Rangel Program."

ʤ, Niazi says, “helped prepare me by allowing me to practice essential skills such as composure, resourcefulness and both written and oral communication that I will be utilizing in my career with the State Department.”

As part of his Rangel Fellowship, Niazi will work for a member of Congress on international issues this summer and next summer will travel overseas to work in a U.S. Embassy.

The Rangel Program’s Scroggs sees a bright future for Niazi.

“I am confident that he will excel in graduate school and will contribute to global peace and prosperity as a U.S. diplomat,” she says.