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From Beirut to Birmingham, Roula's ambition still fires

Tom Fleming speaks to Roula Samaha, of the Radisson SAS Hotel, about her journey from Beirut to Birmingham.

Roula Samaham outside the Radisson SAS Hotel.

Anyone who’s met Roula Samaha knows that what you see is most certainly what you get.

She doesn’t mince her words – nor does she worry too much about what people think of her. That’s why, in her final year as the chair of Birmingham Young Professional of the Year (BYPY), she won’t be embarrassed to channel the spirit of 2009’s most celebrated actress, Kate Winslet, into her last speech.

“The event, in June, is the equivalent of the Oscars for Birmingham’s young professionals; there’s a lot of anticipation surrounding the awards and last year we had a few tears,” she said. “I’m sorry to be stepping down as chair after two years and I think I’m going to do a bit of a Kate Winslet: knowing it will be my last speech as chair will make me emotional and tearful.”

It’s this blend of feminine softness, single-mindedness and an iron will that has seen 30-year-old Roula carve out a successful career in Birmingham, after moving from the bright lights of Dubai four years ago.

Roula Samaha, at the Radisson SAS Hotel, in Birmingham

It’s also seen her court influential businesses in the city to make the centrepiece awards ceremony a runaway success since she took over in 2007.

“I became involved with BYPY soon after arriving in Birmingham and this is my third year on the committee.,” she said. “I’m stepping down as chair because I can’t be sure I’ll still be in Birmingham next year and I don’t want to promise something I can’t deliver. But I’m staying on the leadership team and I’m also looking to get involved in some charity work; I’ve been approached by the Birmingham Foundation.

“I’ve learned a lot through my involvement with BYPY. It’s been a steep learning curve, but it’s been great to work with the nine other people on the committee – everyone works really hard and gives their time for free. This is the awards’ ninth year and we want to keep on making it better.

“The awards give young people the opportunity to showcase their professional development as well as how much they give back to the city in terms of corporate social responsibility. So it’s a two-way thing: people have to be good at their job, but not giving anything back doesn’t get you very far. You need to be an ambassador too.

“Being a BYPY winner is a very good thing to have on your CV – especially in the current economic climate – it helps you stand out from the pack.”

The success of BYPY has come during a decade of huge change for Birmingham.

Having arrived in the middle of its renaissance as regional retail capital, Roula is proud to call the city ‘home’, not least because she can indulge her passion for designer shoes!

“I may not come from Birmingham, but I really fight for the city,” she said. “People say to me, ‘why Birmingham’? and I reply, ‘why not Birmingham’? There’s everything you could want in this city: ever since I came here, I’ve had nothing but friendliness and support.”

It’s a far cry from her homeland of Lebanon, growing up in war-torn Beirut. Having to run for cover in underground shelters was something that punctuated her childhood – and taught her not to take life for granted.

“In the shelter, if you heard the cannon go and then a whizz, you’d know the shell had passed overhead. If you didn’t hear the whizz, you’d know it had landed nearby,” she recalled.

“Looking back, it was a difficult existence, but we coped, not least because we knew little different. Sometimes we weren’t able to go to school for weeks in a row, but we always had work sent to us.

“I did find it quite fun until I was old enough to understand that people were actually dying and then I started to worry whenever my father left the house to go to the airport, where he worked. One of my friends’ fathers died after a bomb fell on his car – it made it very real for me.

“The older I got the more fearful and emotional I became, wondering what was going to happen next. There are things you never forget: whenever I hear the tune that precedes breaking news on the radio in Beirut, it sends shivers down my spine.”

Her childhood goes some way to explaining her determination to succeed, and the sheer grit that’s got her where she is today.

“I think the experiences of my childhood made me a stronger person and gave me a sense of living each day as if it was the last,” she explained. “I became defiant – when you live in a war-torn country, you have that feeling of ‘I’m not going to let them beat me’.”

Roula’s parents also pushed her to succeed. “If I gained 97 per cent in an exam, instead of congratulating me, my father would say ‘what happened to the other three per cent’?” she said.

After 16 years at a French school, she enrolled at the American University of Beirut where she gained an honours degree in psychology. Thirsty for new challenges, and

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