Ontario Medal for Young Volunteers presented to iBioMed student – Faculty of Engineering

Ontario Medal for Young Volunteers presented to iBioMed student

Kusha receiving an award from The Lieutenant Governor and Member of Provincial Parliament
iBioMed student Kusha Shirani receiving the Ontario Young Volunteer Medal from The Honourable Edith Dumont, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario and Hon. Michael Ford, Minister of Citizenship and Multiculturalism
By Keiko Kataoka

Kusha Shirani had no trouble completing the mandatory 40 hours of volunteering required for Ontario high school students. The stack of paperwork he turned into his guidance counsellor amassed to 2,000 hours of community service.

The now first-year Integrated Biomedical Engineering and Health Sciences (iBioMed) student at McMaster University was recently recognized with a prestigious Ontario Medal for Young Volunteers – the highest honour a young person between the ages of 15 and 24 can achieve for outstanding volunteer contributions to their communities and province.

At a Queen’s Park ceremony on March 1, the Honourable Edith Dumont, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, and Hon. Michael Ford, Minister of Citizenship and Multiculturalism, presented the award to Shirani in front of his parents and fellow award recipients.

I felt tremendous pride. It was nice to be acknowledged for the effort, but it really was never about the recognition.

Kusha Shirani

His volunteer spirit was instilled in him at a young age with his parents encouraging his first volunteer role as a park ambassador, which required keeping the green space next to his house free of litter.

Through grade school. Shirani’s volunteerism evolved to working with organizations like the Oakville Trafalgar Hospital where he served as part of the library team, and Big Brothers, Big Sisters Halton.

“Volunteering is rewarding in many ways. You feel good giving back but you’re also developing critical, transferable skills,” he says.

Kusha standing with care package donations.
Kusha Shirani standing with care package donations.

Shirani was also part of the Halton Police Community Youth Initiative, coached a local soccer team, and when communities rallied together during the COVID-19 pandemic, he compiled 250 winter care packages for people in need, funded by a $2,000 SafetyNet grant.

But it was his hospital experience that he counts as the most impactful, inspiring his postsecondary trajectory to biomedical engineering and health sciences. “Gaining experience interacting with patients and making an impact inspired me to pursue an education with hands-on experiences,” he explains.

Wrapping up his first year in the rigorous iBioMed program, Shirani is eager to get back to his volunteering work over the summer. He plans to return to the Oakville hospital and is pursuing an opportunity to teach soccer to children with disabilities.

That’s the thing with volunteering. Once you start, you are motivated to continue.

Kusha Shirani