Afghan woman seeks to become youngest to make solo round-the-world flight

Wednesday, 17 May 2017 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

 

01Shaesta Waiz, Afghanistan’s first female certified civilian pilot and a recent graduate of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, poses after arriving in Montreal, Canada, May 15, 2017 on the third leg of her round-the-world solo flight. She is launching the Dreams Soar solo round-the-world flight to inspire the next generation of women pilots and raise awareness of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) education - AFP

 

AFP: An Afghan pilot hoping to become the youngest woman in history to complete a solo round-the-world flight was preparing Monday to start the Transatlantic leg of her journey.

Shaesta Waiz, 29, was born in a refugee camp at the end of the Soviet war in Afghanistan before immigrating with her family to the United States in 1987.

There, she discovered a passion for flying and obtained her pilot’s license - becoming the youngest certified civilian female pilot from Afghanistan.

Now she wants to share that sense of freedom of soaring high above ground with other young women.

“When I found my passion – flying - that’s when I started to challenge myself. I started to read. I started to do better in maths. I started to look at the world differently, the sky differently,” Waiz said as she made a stopover in Montreal. 

“What’s important is finding your passion and going after it.”

Waiz took off from Daytona Beach, Florida on Saturday and has mapped out a route that will take her aboard her Beechcraft Bonanza A36 aircraft approximately 25,800 kilometers (16,000 miles) to more than 18 countries, including Spain, Egypt, India, Singapore and Australia, before ending the trip back in Florida in August.

During her 30 stopovers, the engineering graduate and the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), which is backing her trip, will host events to try to get schoolchildren interested in science - notably aeronautics.

According to ICAO figures, less than five percent of commercial pilots are women.

“If you really break it down into science, technology, engineering and math and explore what those career fields offer, it’s very exciting,” Waiz said.

“We hope to present to the young kids at these events what those careers are...and hopefully get them to pursue these careers that are in need of more talent.”

On the website of her non-profit Dreams Soar, she commented: “Every time I open the door of an aircraft, I ask myself, ‘How did a girl with my background become so lucky? The truth is, anyone can be me.’”03

 

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