I have
worked in foreign affairs for most of my life and, whether serving in Japan,
the United States, or in Egypt, I discovered that the calling of international
relations is far more than the pursuit of policy and strategic interest. Such
concerns form a framework for the conduct of international affairs. Yet,
diplomacy, at its heart, is about relationships—building bridges, not just
between nations, but between cultures and individuals. After leaving diplomacy
to become the dean of the School of Global Affairs and Public Policy at the
American University in Cairo (AUC) in 2009, I had the good fortune to work with
a man of great skill and quality of character who was an exemplary diplomat in
that sense: Medhat Haroun, AUC’s provost, who passed away on October 18.
In paying
tribute to Medhat, most will naturally recall a life marked by professional and
academic success. He received his PhD in structural and earthquake engineering
from the California Institute of Technology, and was a professor at the
University of California, Irvine, for twenty years. He returned to teach in his
native Egypt in 1999, initially as chair of AUC’s Engineering department,
before becoming dean of the School of Sciences and Engineering in 2005, and provost
in 2011. Awards and plaudits for excellence in teaching seemed to follow
wherever his career took him, while his tireless dedication and optimistic
vision enriched everyone he worked with. He generated millions of dollars in
funding for undergraduate, master’s, and doctoral degree programs in such
diverse fields as nanotechnology, biotechnology, and computer engineering. One
of his proudest accomplishments was establishing AUC’s first PhD program in
applied sciences and engineering.
Among his
many achievements in the field of engineering was Medhat’s work as an expert in
the construction of actual bridges. He was well known for his efforts to make
them safe in the event of earthquakes. To me, his ability to build human
bridges is what truly defined him. When I arrived at AUC, I quickly realized
how little I knew about what it meant to be a dean of a school. AUC President
Lisa Anderson, who was provost at that time, pointed me in Medhat’s direction,
fondly describing him as “the real thing.” Medhat and his wife Rita immediately
invited my wife and I for dinner at their home. We spent several hours
discussing world politics, Egypt, and AUC. When I finally posed my mundane
questions about the challenges of running a school, there was no lecturing, no
condescension in his voice. He gave his advice freely and effortlessly in a
manner that at once put me at ease and gave me everything I needed to know.
Medhat
was a natural teacher and leader. He was a skilled communicator, who truly
understood the wants and needs of others. Medhat’s gifts were once again on
display when a student strike shut down AUC early in the Fall 2012 Semester.
despite his worsening struggle with cancer, he remained at the forefront of
negotiations with the students and efforts to re-open the campus gates. That
was Medhat Haroun, a man dedicated to bringing people together and bridging the
cultural, political, and ideological divides that separate so many. We will
miss his energy, his passion in his work, and his overwhelming sense of
fairness, which seemed to guide everything that he did.
Nabil Fahmy is the dean of the
School of Global Affairs and Public Policy at the American University in Cairo.