Fahmida Zaman of Bangladesh, a foreign-exchange student this year at St. Catherine University in St. Paul, credits her enterprising mom and a $100 loan from Grameen Bank in 2000 as the seed of her opportunity to achieve a college education.
It was the first of several "microloans" that allowed her mother to diversify the family's tiny fertilizer business and slowly build a modest enterprise that has helped educate five children.
"By the time I got out of high school most of my girlfriends were married'' through family-arranged unions, said Zaman, 21, who is studying economics and political science. "My mother wanted me to experience college and do something for the people of my country who don't get that chance.''
She will return to Asian University for Women in Bangladesh to complete her degree next year. "My goal is to do something significant in my society ... to be the change I want to see," she said.
Zaman's economic hero is Muhammad Yunus, 72, the Bangladesh-born economist and father of the global "microlending" phenomenon.
The two will meet in Minneapolis on Friday after Yunus addresses "business day" participants at the annual three-day Nobel Peace Prize Forum in Minneapolis, hosted by Augsburg College and the Humphrey School of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota.
"This is fantastic," Yunus said in a phone interview from Bangladesh. "I want to meet Fahmida."
The Minneapolis conference in the only one in the world designated by Norway's Nobel Institute, according to Maureen Reed, executive director of the Nobel Forum at Augsburg.