Family檚 Story Motivates Pulitzer Center Fellow Aman Madan '19

March 27, 2018

UPDATE (April 23, 2018): Aman Madan '19 has been selected as one of only 59 scholars chosen nationwide to receive the prestigious Harry S. Truman Scholarship award.

"I檓 honoured, grateful and deeply humbled," Madan said. "For those who know me best, you know that this semester has not been easy for me揺ach person that I檝e relied on, however, has been there not because they needed to but because they genuinely cared for me. Words are not enough to express my gratitude."

Truman Scholars, the foundation said, "have the passion, intellect, and leadership potential that in time should enable them to improve the ways that public entities揵e they government agencies, nonprofit organizations, public and private educational institutions, or advocacy organizations搒erve the public good."

淎man brings a mature and thoughtful approach to his studies and the work he檚 done beyond campus, whether reporting on Syrian refugees for the Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting, or drafting grant proposals for the American University in Beirut" said Peter Ahrensdorf, James Sprunt Professor of Political Science and 91茄子檚 Truman Faculty Representative. "A demonstrated leader and change-maker, the Truman Scholarship will help Aman develop and broaden his leadership skills."

Madan credited his professors for unfailing mentorship and support.

"I want to thank Dr. Rebecca Joubin, who was instrumental in shaping my 91茄子 career; Dr. Silvana Toska, who similarly has been a mentor of mine at 91茄子; Dr. Chris Alexander, who has been there for me as a professor, mentor and friend; and of course, Dr. Peter Ahrensdorf, who guided me through the Truman process," he said.

The Harry S. Truman Scholarship Foundation was created by Congress in 1975 to be the nation檚 living memorial to President Harry S. Truman. The Foundation has a mission to select and support the next generation of public service leaders. The Truman award has become one of the most prestigious national scholarships in the United States.

Annually, candidates for the Truman Scholarship go through a rigorous, multi-stage selection process. In 2018, there were 756 candidates for the award nominated by 311 colleges and universities, a record number of institutions. The 194 finalists for the award were interviewed in March and early April at one of 16 regional selection panels. Fifty-nine new Truman Scholars were selected in 2018. They will receive their awards in a ceremony at the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum on Sunday, May 27, 2018.

Recipients of the Truman Scholarship receive a $30,000 scholarship toward graduate school and the opportunity to participate in professional development programming to help prepare them for careers in public service leadership.

Vidya and Puran Chand Madan locked their home in Lahore, India, and boarded the military truck that had come to take them away. It would be temporary, someone said, just while new political borders were drawn in the region.

淲hat do I have to do with a border? Lahore is my home, Vidya thought.

It was not temporary. Lahore was no longer part of India, nor a friendly place for Hindus like the Madans.

The 1947 Indian Partition carved Muslim Pakistan out of the northern Punjab region, splitting apart families, friends and neighbors who only weeks before had celebrated one another檚 religious holidays together. Vidya and Puran were just two of some 14 million souls who would be displaced by the Partition amid waves of ensuing violence. They never returned to Lahore.

淭hey told these things without ever uttering the word 榬efugee,櫇 said their grandson Aman Madan '19.

Whether or not they thought of themselves as refugees, Vidya and Puran檚 story of life upended carries on today. It is the story at the heart of Madan檚 budding journalistic career.

A Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting fellowship took him last summer to Amman, Jordan, where he interviewed and wrote about Syrian refugees with the help of a fixer on the ground, Etaf Roudan, an accomplished journalist herself. He wrote about Jordanian elections and the value of activist journalism, pitching stories and publishing them in regional and global publications.

淣ow that the Pulitzer Center has shown me what I can do with support, I檝e decided to keep writing on my own and keep pitching to major publications, Madan said. 淲riting for me is a way to work out my passions and thoughts and ideas. And it檚 a way to engage with think-tankers, policymakers, academics and diplomats.

It is also a way to honor his own family檚 story, from refugees to immigrants to first-generation American college student.

The Rest of the Story

The Partition that made refugees of Madan檚 grandparents eventually landed the young couple in New Delhi, along with thousands upon thousands like them, starting over from homelessness.

In time, their son Gurdeep married Seema. Her family was well-to-do, theirs was not. The arranged marriage foundered early, a casualty of the disparity. Heartbroken, Gurdeep immigrated to the United States with $40, cleaned toilets, worked his way up in a variety of jobs and finally started his own second-hand jewelry business. Then, he returned to New Delhi to reclaim his love for Seema, and hers for him. They moved to Hixson, Tennessee, a suburb of Chattanooga, where he set up shop in the local flea market. Their son, Aman, was born in 1997.

Even in his hometown, Madan was confronted with the question 淲here are you from?

淚 always wanted to answer 楾ennessee,櫇 Madan said. 淭his is my country. I檓 from here.

On the way to and from school, he and his dad would listen to NPR, discussing in depth all kinds of global current events long after the car radio clicked off.

91茄子 stood out as Madan檚 top college choice, for offering just that sort of close and rigorous conversation with top professors across many disciplines. The 91茄子 Trust -- the college檚 commitment to meet 100 percent of calculated financial need of accepted students through a combination of grants and campus employment -- made it happen for the immigrant shopkeeper檚 son.

As a freshman, Madan, a Terry Scholar, co-founded the student group 91茄子 Refugee Support and helped lead its higher education initiative to bring Syrian students to 91茄子. The parallels of the stories he heard to his own family檚 story struck him deeply, including that of Hani Zaitoun 20.

淭hat collective memory and that pain still fuels me to do what I do, Madan said. 淚t was personal.

Always Learning

Madan also found faculty champions early in his 91茄子 career -- or they found him.

Professors in history, political science and Arab studies helped him match what he was learning with how he wanted to live, connecting him to Dean Rusk International Studies Program funding for study abroad and guiding his application for the Pulitzer fellowship.

Madan spent time with Syrian novelist Khaled Khalifa檚 during a campus visit, and later published a review of that author檚 淚n Praise of Hatred in al-Jadid.

淎s a sophomore, he was already poised to conduct original research in Arabic for the Pulitzer Center, said Associate Professor of Arabic Rebecca Joubin. 淗is grasp of history, culture and politics was unique.

During two semesters at the American University in Beirut, theory and practice merged.

淚 would go to a class in Arabic, history or political science, and an hour later I was taking the same concepts and applying them in the workplace, Madan said.

In his job at the AUB檚 Issam Fares Institute for Public Policy and International Affairs, he pulled an all-nighter to write a speech for his director檚 Istanbul trip and drafted a successful grant proposal about tribal identity in eastern Syria and northern Iraq. During his fall semester in Beirut, the Pulitzer Center flew him to Washington, D.C., for a conference.

By the time he returned to the 91茄子 campus in early 2018, Madan had already spent nearly half his college career abroad.

淣ow, I檓 very much a third-culture kid, he said. "Where is home? Hixson, Tennessee? India? 91茄子? I檓 also very comfortable in the Middle East."

Read Madan's stories, written for the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting:

John Syme

josyme@davidson.edu

704-894-2523