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The Quirks of Arfa a Tribute To an Extraordinary Person By Ali Moeen Nawazish 17 january 2012
When Arfa was 9, newspapers and  television anchors talked ceaselessly  about how becoming the youngest  Microsoft professional had made her the Wonder kid of our nation. They  portrayed her as this scholarly and  somewhat highly intellectualised  figure. The image of a child who liked   nothing more than to glue her eyes to a computer screen, and saw what no   one else could perceive behind the monitor’s glass. Most of us have in   fact seen the famous photograph of her in Redmond Washington, standing   alongside the Microsoft headquarters.
She seemed as if she was always meant to  be there, a God-gifted  computer genius. But today I don’t want to talk  about her intelligence  and abilities. Instead, I want to focus on the  things that increased my  praise and admiration for her more than any of  her academic achievements  ever could.
Recalling one of her very first  experiences with computer, Arfa once  said “When you push a button,  something magically appears on the box.”  As much as I would like to  portray this simple quote as something  remarkably astute, I must point  out that it isn’t so. These are simply  the words of a child who merely  chose not to give up on her imagination –  something every child is born  with. This reminds me of something  Einstein once said:
“Imagination is more important than  knowledge. For knowledge is  limited to all we now know and understand,  while imagination embraces  the entire world, and all there ever will be  to know and understand.” Arfa not only imagined what no one else did, but she also made her imagination come true.
All children have dreams about one day  doing something extraordinary  but as we grow up, what we call the  realities of life,  slowly start  setting in and at some unknown point  in our lives, we become afraid to  dream big. That’s one thing Arfa  never did. She always knew, if you  don’t dream big then what’s the  point in dreaming. At 9, Arfa said, she  would like to go to Harvard  University or MIT, and then either go to  work for Microsoft, in its  developer division, or become a satellite  engineer.
At 16, her dreams still hadn’t changed. In fact, they had become even more ambitious.
Among the things that aren’t generally  known about Arfa are the facts  that she was amazingly humble,  energetic, driven to help others,  unafraid to ask questions and that  she could fly a plane. Yes, a plane. I  have lost count of the number of  small kids I have met who say that  they want to grow up to be pilots  but Arfa didn’t wait till she grew up.  Oh and did you know she liked  Ghazals and even sang them! She was taken  from us too soon, and perhaps  the youth has felt the pain more so than  anyone else.
More than her intelligence, I believe  that these little things are  what made Arfa the extraordinary person  that she was and I am sure she  would want to be remembered for all of  them. May you rest in peace Arfa  Karim, and may Allah bless you and  your family. You were a good friend  and a great inspiration. Your  spirit and memory will live on in our  hearts for as long as we live.  The youth lost one of its best today, but  you have inspired so many  that we will all try to not let you down.
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