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Invited by Justin Trudeau, 鶹Ƶ's Lana El Sanyoura addresses fellow graduates across the country

Lana El Sanyoura stands at a podium with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau visible in the distant background
Lana El Sanyoura, who graduated from 鶹Ƶ with a degree in cognitive science and computer science, was one of four students invited to Ottawa by Justin Trudeau to deliver an address to the country's graduating class (photo by Adam Scotti)

As a recent University of Toronto graduate, Lana El Sanyoura is no stranger to meeting deadlines and occasionally working late into the night.

Yet, yesterday evening, El Sanyoura received an assignment unlike any other she’s faced over the last four years: an invitation to come to Ottawa and join Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in an address to the class of 2020 – right across Canada.

She hopped into a car shortly after 8 p.m. and, with her mom at the wheel, pulled out her laptop to draft her remarks. She watched Michelle Obama’s 2020 commencement speech for inspiration and FaceTimed her dad in Lebanon for feedback.

Before stepping up to the lecturn the next morning, El Sanyoura says she felt a weight of responsibility to share words of hope with fellow students graduating at a extraordinarily challenging time in history – and one in which the class of 2020 is needed to make positive changes.

“We are faced with an unprecedented pandemic, systemic injustice in various forms and an unstable climate that is changing life as we know it,” El Sanyoura said in her remarks.

“So let’s ask ourselves: How can we use our education, our tools as graduates and our voices to make a difference?”

For El Sanyoura,  who graduated with an undergraduate degree in cognitive science and computer science from the Faculty of Arts & Science, that means making sure that the benefits of technology are shared evenly and that machine learning is free of unfair biases. She says she chose to study at 鶹Ƶ because it offered her a path to combine her passions in science, math, the human mind, art and self-expression.

El Sanyoura was one of just four Canadian university graduates invited to Ottawa to participate in the address to the country’s graduating class alongside the Prime Minister.  

Trudeau praised El Sanyoura for her work building community in her department, where she co-founded a club for women in computer science, taught programming workshops and mentored other students.

She won the Konrad Women in Tech Scholarship, the and conducted original research projects in language learning and culture shift in Assistant Professor Yang Xu’s Cognitive Lexicon Lab. She also interned at Intel, participated in research at the MIT-IBM Watson AI Lab and was twice named MVP on her intramural basketball team.

On top of all that, El Sanyoura is a songwriter, choreographer, filmmaker and photographer.

As an undergraduate student, El Sanyoura said she learned to be resilient and bounce back from disappointment.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau meets with graduates, including 鶹Ƶ’s Lana El Sanyoura (far right), in Ottawa (photo by Adam Scotti)

That message was echoed by Trudeau when it was his turn at the microphone. He commended the class of 2020 for the work they put into obtaining their degrees and noted the challenges they face.

“No student gets to choose the world into which they graduate, but if you could – and let’s be honest here – you probably wouldn’t have chosen the world of 2020,” he said, listing events like the crash of Ukraine International Airlines Flight 752, which killed eight 鶹Ƶ community members, the Nova Scotia shootings and COVID-19. 

“The choices you will make, both big and small, in the next few years will decide the future of our country, and of our world, and I cannot think of a generation better prepared to set us on the right path forward.”

Lana El Sanyoura is pictured here with her mother and partner, Malek Singer (photo by Alison Evans)

El Sanyoura, who is currently working for Amazon, reserved the last part of her speech to thank essential workers, health-care professionals and everyone who helped the graduates of 2020 achieve their goals – in her case, her mother and father, Randa and Ayman El Sanyoura.

She will return to 鶹Ƶ in the fall to begin a master’s degree in computer science.

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