Fact: I lived my whole life in a village. I came to Dhaka (capital of Bangladesh) just about 4+ years ago. My objective of life was to get a job that pays $130/month. When I was 11, I had calculated that that was enough for a family of ours of 5.
In a country with 142 million population in such a small area as Bangladesh, it increasingly becomes difficult to improve without exporting the brains to onshore. You do not have enough money to industrialize. You do not have enough lands to spread production factories without cutting down trees and taking over increasingly deficient lands per head. In addition, Governments we had over the decades in Bangladesh, none of them were famous for being a world class leader ever. It’s rather a reality for many developing countries and more like a vicious cycle. Inhabitants of those unfortunate lands, live clueless as to how to improve their conditions, because Governments appear to be the biggest blocker to the development for most developing nations. Therefore, to improve your own condition without much external help, the most practical solution seems to be, like I have started this post with – be skilled in technology and export your brain either physically or via internet.
When Pointers to Technology is Unavailable
So, why wait? Get a computer and internet and start learning everything. Oh, you can’t afford one? Go to the school library and start now. Come on now – don’t tell me your school don’t have it! Wait, they don’t?
They really don’t.
With 53% literacy rate, 30% population in poverty and almost dysfunctional guardian of the nation, it is expected that the future of tomorrow may not have access to the wonder of the technology world. Growing up in traditional lower/middle class family system, their targets are orthodox jobs as a result of being paralyzed by the system – it’s not their fault.
I believe that we can create a poverty-free world because poverty is not created by poor people. It has been created and sustained by the economic and social systems that we have designed for ourselves; the institutions and concepts that make up that system; the policies that we pursue. – Muhammad Yunus
What if their schools have computers and internet access? Well, the teachers they have – many of them don’t even know how to use computers let alone guiding their pupils to the right direction. They don’t even have clear idea about Computer and Information Technology. How can their students learn from them? Most students don’t know what’s out there, possibilities and their potentials.
Super Heroes Have Responsibility
Like I have said quite a few times before – there’s no international company at Microsoft’s scale has opened an office in Bangladesh. When Microsoft, the first and the most successful software company in the history first opened their office in Bangladesh, many so called intellectuals were skeptic that Microsoft’s sole purpose would be selling Windows in the market. They never welcomed Microsoft because they thought if they had to buy Windows from the stores (not by $1 DVD, rather full retail price), that will limit access to Computer and Information Technology through out the whole country. Not only Microsoft didn’t negotiate any deal with the Government or put restriction on pirated Windows selling, but also they have created more opportunities to get students and rest of the Bangladesh population get even better and official access to the resources Microsoft has to offer – most of the time those are FREE! I will talk about some of those in later posts, but today I’ll point out what Microsoft did keeping those pupils in mind who have nobody to point at the potentials they have with the possibilities of Computer and Information Technology.
The Launch of TechFire Series
Microsoft Bangladesh contacted two prominent schools of Dhaka St. Francis Xavier’s Girls High School and St Gregory’s School to send their curious students to attend a brand new series of seminars named “TechFire" where they will be able to learn what’s out there, what they can do now, and how they can prepare themselves for future. It was held on June 11, 2011 in presence of honorable Member of Parliament Mr. Mizanur Rahman Khan Dipu (Dhaka-6) as the Chief Guest of the event and was hosted by as usual Omi Azad, Developer Evangelist at Microsoft Bangladesh. It comprised of brief yet interactive sessions.
- Ahmed Niaz Morshed – Opening Speech
- Hassan Tanvir Mansur – Windows 7 and the Ultimate Features
- Zikrul Ahsan Shawon – Customer Relationship Management systems
- Khan Reaz – What can be DONE when Technology is FUN
- Kazi Mamun – Microsoft KODU
- Tanzim Saqib – Show me the Money
- Omi Azad – Power of Students
Clockwise: (1) Me presenting, (2) A student asking questions, and (3) Students collecting gifts in the end
Show Me the Money
The sessions were fun, engaging, interactive yet informative. And obviously I was more passionate about money than the rest on that day. While I was choosing my topic for the seminar, only thing that mattered to my thought for some reasons, was money. So, I took Jerry Maguire as my inspiration: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OaiSHcHM0PA
Let me tell you something about my life. I lived my whole life in a village. I came to Dhaka just about 4+ years ago. My objective of life was to get a job that pays $130/month. When I was 11, I had calculated that that was enough for a family of ours of 5. I am no rich, but in later part of my life, I got employed by world’s leading software companies. For someone whose life’s mission was a job of $130/month salary background, I thought my story from the very childhood was worth sharing with the future of tomorrow and as the matter of fact it’s the best that I can remember – every little piece of it!
So I told them how to learn skills, export their brains and make money. ![]()
Conclusion
We should all need to find our own ways to give back to the community. TechFire is one of the great ways to do it. I hope this seminar series will go a long way. Microsoft Bangladesh will continue to arrange in different parts of the country hopefully starting with quite a few in Dhaka and so on. I am happy being part of the inaugural episode of it. I also hope that they will extend the core idea to make it even more fun and engaging in future. All the best to them!
