Our Campus: Dharamsi sister act in work and volunteering

Philanthropy has always been a driving force in the lives of UBC students and sisters Alia and Salina Dharamsi. Photo courtesy Lia and Salina Dharamsi.

Philanthropy has always been a driving force in the lives of UBC students and sisters Alia and Salina Dharamsi. Photo courtesy of Alia and Salina Dharamsi.

Philanthropy has always been a driving force in the lives of both Alia and Salina Dharamsi.

As part of an immigrant population in Vancouver, the two sisters were encouraged by their parents to volunteer in the Ismaili community and raise their voice from a very early age. The pair has taken the pay-it-forward ethos and transferred it into the hustle and bustle of school and work life by engaging in a variety of volunteer experiences in the local and international community.

“When I was growing up, I had this very innate sense of justice and fairness,” said younger sister Salina, a Sauder graduate. “Helping out in the community and going on international service trips was my way to contribute to some really global problems. I didn’t just want to read about hunger; I wanted to go and see people.”

The two sisters have been around the world for their extracurriculars. Salina has volunteered in Guatemala, India and Rwanda. She was also a student delegate at the Peace Conference of Youth in Japan, a program aimed at leaders who want to achieve world peace. Alia went to Guatemala and taught English and science to the local community there.

“I noticed that a lot of the same issues that I was seeing here, for example in the Downtown Eastside, were really replicated internationally,” said Alia, who is in her fourth year of medicine at UBC.

Where Alia sees herself in the field of emergency medicine, Salina is more business-minded. She is completing her masters in accounting at the University of Saskatchewan, aspiring to become a chartered accountant. She is also working full time with the firm KPMG as an auditor and hopes to work in sustainability auditing.

While the two Dharamsis have chosen to pursue different career paths, their sisterly bond has always been intact and even helps with their volunteering project. Alia said while she was director of the Meal Exchange Organization in the Downtown Eastside, Salina contributed to the financial planning of the project.

Despite their varying interests and being two years apart, Alia has been an inspiration to younger sister Salina.

“I think for me it showed me that it’s possible. It was real because she was my sister and she lived five steps away from me and if she could do it, I could do it too,” said Salina.

“We have the distinct privilege of being sisters because what that comes with is someone who is by our side 100 per cent of the time, be it in volunteering, in school, in play,” said Alia. “I think that’s an advantage. That is a blessing and a gift that has allowed us to grow in ways we could not have done alone.”

Pressures in applying to highly sought after programs, jobs and internships in fields like medicine and commerce can leave students resorting to “resumé padding” to stay competitive. But both Alia and Salina emphasized seeing volunteering as an opportunity for personal development rather than a means to fill up space on a resumé.

“There is so much more to volunteering than writing a line on a resumé. Sometimes when I write my resumé I feel like it does not [do it] justice. I feel like it’s letters on page that don’t really capture the experience,” said Salina.

Alia says volunteer experience should be anchored in your passions and interests.

“Don’t look at someone and think what they’re doing is so unattainable,” Salina said. “Everything you do snowballs in life and I’m such a firm believer in that. You start small and as you go you find new ways to get involved — different indicatives, bigger roles.”

 http://ubyssey.ca/features/our-campus-dharamsi-sister-act-698/

Paying it Forward

Think that accountancy only involves adding up numbers? Think again. Award-winning Sauder BCom graduate Salina Dharamsi is out to prove that it can change the world.

Trying to solve some of the planet’s most complex and intractable humanitarian problems by teaching people accountancy skills isn’t as far-fetched as it might sound. Salina already has first-hand experience of how it can work.During her undergraduate degree, Salina took part in the Arc Initiative, a project that facilitates a two-way exchange of knowledge and business skills between Sauder students and communities in South Africa, Ethiopia and Colombia. She travelled to Johannesburg to take part in building programs, internships, workshops and mentoring activities for young entrepreneurs.

Salina Dharamsi Volunteering in Africa“As a co-op student I was able to represent both Sauder and my company (KPMG) at the same time,” says Salina. “It’s amazing to see how quickly business and accounting skills can make a tangible difference in these communities.”


“A lot of people have a very old-fashioned view of what accountants are. They think that we’re just bean-counters. But when you understand the financial implications of things you can dramatically increase the potential for positive change.”

– Sauder BCom alumna Salina Dharamsi

In tune with students

Salina now divides her time between her many charitable projects, her auditing job at KPMG in Vancouver and studying for a Masters in Professional Accounting.

Among her many accolades so far she has been a youth ambassador for World Vision Canada and a panelist and youth facilitator for two United Nations debates in New York and Geneva. She was also the sole Canadian student delegate, representing both her country and the Sauder School of Business, at the Peace Conference of Youth held in Japan in 2012.

According to Salina, Sauder was the perfect place to develop her skills and experience in both business and international development.

“The faculty are so in tune with their students and have this incredible ability to match them with amazing opportunities for personal and professional growth.” she says. “A lot of people have a very old-fashioned view of what accountants are. They think that we’re just bean-counters. But when you understand the financial implications of things you can dramatically increase the potential for positive change. For me accounting is more than just a job – these are skills that can actually transform peoples’ lives.”

Giving back

Salina’s enthusiasm for community service and international development resulted in her being awarded a BC Community Achievement Medallion and a Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Medal. And now her alma mater has got in on the act, recognizing her achievements with the UBC Future Alumnus Award.

“It’s made me see how many ways there are to stay involved with the university and give back to the community that did so much for me,” Salina says. “For the award to go to a business student is a great credit to Sauder as well. People assume that you go to business school only because you want to make money. But there are a lot of people at Sauder who really do care about finding ways to build sustainable communities around the world. It really shines a light on what our business school is all about.”

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