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From Afghan Pilot to Afghan Refugee to Taking Flight Again

Shahpur Pazhman had a natural talent for flying.  It was easy to recognize.  So easy that after high school in Kabul, he was accepted into the Afghan Air Force University’s officer candidate program and became one of fifteen people selected to receive advanced flight training in the United States.

In 2017, after two years at the U.S. Army flight school in Ft. Rucker, Alabama, Shahpur received his wings—becoming one of four UH-60 Blackhawk pilots in the Afghan Air Force.

Returning to Afghanistan, he flew missions with the Afghan Air Force (AAF) Kandahar Squadron, Kabul Squadron, and then served as an instruction pilot and trained the next generation of AAF Blackhawk pilots.

All told, Shahpur flew missions in 27 of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces—resupplying and relocating Afghan ground forces and evacuating casualties to safety—and accrued 1200 flight hours.

When the Afghan government collapsed in August 2021, the Taliban placed a target on his back.  Evading Taliban checkpoints and dodging search parties for weeks, Shahpur and his wife and children made it through the Kabul Airport security perimeter and were evacuated to the United States via Qatar and Germany.

When Shahpur received his UH-60 qualification in 2017, he also received a congratulatory letter from Senator John McCain.  In it, the former naval aviator stated, “Be proud of your accomplishments and never stop believing in yourself.”

But it’s hard to believe in yourself when you’ve gone from Afghan pilot to Afghan refugee.  When you’re without a home, transportation or employment; when you have a family to support and no assets; when you had to destroy your valuable flight records to protect yourself from your enemy; when you have a job search process to navigate that is both foreign and complex.  You need some help.

Sometimes that help comes from places and people you don’t expect.  Strangers even.

Residing in temporary housing in Phoenix, Shahpur reached out to a colleague from flight school to begin networking.  Eventually, he connected with Bridge My Return (BMR), a tech-enabled hiring platform for the military community, and completed his BMR profile.

BMR contacted Blackstone, a leading private equity firm, a relentless military advocate and a BMR partner whose commitment to serve historically underrepresented talent is reflected in their establishment of Blackstone Career Pathways.  Blackstone, in turn, connected BMR with Signature Aviation, a Blackstone portfolio company and the world's largest network of Fixed Base Operations (FBOs).  Signature published some of their jobs on the BMR platform.  BMR’s skills-to-skills matching algorithm connected Shaphur’s profile with an operations position in Phoenix.

Once the match was made, an interview was scheduled.  However, the route was bumpy because of transportation challenges and Shahpur’s understandable unfamiliarity with the job interview process in this country.  Signature understood.  They extended grace.  Then they extended an offer.

Shahpur did not land his dream job; he wants to fly again.  Yet he’s already taken flight: He is in the right industry with a company that “gets” him and he’s back on course, having just received an employee recognition award from his new employer.

Shahpur heeded Senator McCain’s advice to “never stop believing in yourself.”  Still, it helps when others believe in you, too. 

 

Bridge My Return (BMR) is a tech-enabled hiring platform exclusively for the military community—Veterans, transitioning service members, guard/reserve members, spouses and caregivers.  If you’d like BMR’s support to help you find new or better work, we invite you to get started here.  There is no cost to the military jobseeker.

 

Employers seeking to hire military talent can get the conversation started by contacting us.

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