‘I didn’t feel like a refugee anymore’: How the Scholars-at-Risk program is giving U of T academics a fresh start
Awak Abit Bior, Vadym Lytvynov and Ghizal Haress rebuilt their lives and careers in Canada after fleeing conflict and persecution in their home countries.

An undergraduate economics student who was born in South Sudan and raised in a refugee camp in Kenya. A graduate of a University of Toronto master’s program who was displaced from Ukraine after the Russian invasion. A constitutional lawyer and scholar who fled Afghanistan after the Taliban seized power.
With the help of U of T’s Scholars-at-Risk Award Program, Awak Abit Bior, Vadym Lytvynov and Ghizal Haress rebuilt their lives and careers in Canada after fleeing conflict and persecution in their home countries. The fellowships provide $10,000 per year to students whose studies have been impacted by war and upheaval – and supported 50 students from 13 countries last year alone. Established professors who are awarded a fellowship are hired by departments or faculties as visiting scholars.
Bior, Lytvynov and Haress recently shared their experiences during a panel discussion moderated by physician James Orbinski, a professor in the Temerty Faculty of Medicine and principal of Massey College.
“We are privileged to be engaging with three outstanding scholars who are also Scholars-at-Risk,” said Orbinski, who accepted the 1999 Nobel Peace Prize on behalf of Médecins Sans Frontières and brought his experience working in diverse conflict areas to the discussion.
Orbinski thanked the panelists for sharing their “deep personal and intellectual experiences” – which he noted offer insights into the challenges faced by global communities amid geopolitical tensions, authoritarianism and “the fraying of an international system of institutions, law, norms and values.”

“The kind of courage that it takes for these Scholars-at-Risk to not only put their lives at risk in their home countries and home societies, but to then come … and start their lives elsewhere and continue their studies here at the University of Toronto – it’s that courage that always strikes me as extremely profound,” Joseph Wong, U of T’s vice-president, international, said at the event.
Similarly, David Palmer, U of T’s vice-president, advancement, said international scholars make enormous contributions to U of T – and that the Scholars-at-Risk program and those who support it are “a wonderful example of the role that institutions like the University of Toronto can and must play in the world around us.”
Here’s what Bior, Lytvynov and Haress had to say about their journeys – and the role of universities in supporting those seeking sanctuary: