AliReda Jeafar spends his days working for the City of Detroit. In the City Clerk’s office, he helps log citizen needs, directs Detroiters toward solutions and shares this information with the office’s leadership in customized charts and spreadsheets.
Full of energy and personality, the Fall 2023 College of Arts, Sciences and Letters graduate — who is earning his Master of Public Administration and Policy — seems like a natural fit in a public-helping role for one of the nation’s largest cities. “I love hearing from residents and working for the city,” he says. “You feel like no matter where you are, no matter what you do, you're doing something that’s contributing to the public good by connecting people to the help they need.”
But Jeafar said the road to this great fit wasn’t in a straight line. It came slowly into focus through internships, classes, work experiences and soul searching. The once aspiring lawyer — a dream his parents had for him — realized, while in law school in 2020, that his goals were different.
"I had a good job. I was working at a personal injury law office. But I just couldn't shake the nagging feeling of, 'what am I doing here?' Something didn’t sit right with me,” says Jeafar, whose parents came from Lebanon and raised their family in Dearborn Heights. “I didn’t want to disappoint my parents. They meant well. But I started to realize that their dream for me wasn’t my dream for me. I know there are other students out there who might be in a similar situation and I want to let them know that it’s OK to pursue the career you want. It can be hard, but in the end, it will work out.”
At that crossroads in 2020, Jeafar — who earned his bachelor's degree from UM-Dearborn in 2017 — took inventory of all the activities and professional experiences that he’s enjoyed.
As a UM-Dearborn undergrad, he worked for the Washtenaw County Public Defender’s Office and loved the work. He went to people’s houses to help them get the right clothes for court, made contact with people for character witness statements and helped defendants prepare for court.
He also liked volunteering with the Accounting Aid Society, where he helped prepare taxes for low-income Detroiters. And he knew he had a solid educational foundation from his time in the CASL Honors program, which was directed by Professor Emeritus Gerald F. Moran when Jeafar was in the program. Moran told Jeafar that he needed to follow his passion. “His message served as a call to action and a beacon of hope. His words were very comforting when times got really tough. They were my compass,” Jeafar says. “I credit Professor Moran’s guidance to getting me where I am today.” Moran, who Jeafar says was “like a grandfather to me,” died in 2022.