Go, Bushra, go!

07.23.20

Bushra Lohrasbi is always on the run—literally. And not even a quarantine can stop her.

It was late-April and Bushra was like most of us: stuck at home. COVID-19 had brought an early end to her final semester at Penn State, and she was back at her parents’ house in Ellicott City, looking for a way to help.

Her daily runs gave her time to think, and she devised a way to turn her favorite activity into frontline care for people without homes. She asked friends and family to sponsor each day she ran in May by donating to Health Care the Homeless.

“I could sense a lot of helpless energy on social media and in calls with my friends and family,” she says. “It was a hard transition. I wanted to give my friends and family an easy way to help.”

Bushra quickly had a sponsor—sometimes more than one— for every day. Over the next 31 days, she ran 135 miles and got 50 donations, raising over $700.

Bushra was surprised by the response, but she also sees it as an indication of how young people like her are eager to push for social change. You can see that across the country with youthful energy fueling protests against police brutality and systemic racism. “As young people, we have so many tools at our disposal,” she says. “Our education, social awareness, ginormous social media connections—that can drive us to fight for changes in our communities.”

Bushra’s passion is studying the ways trauma—childhood abuse, homelessness, racism—impacts our brain’s way of processing communication and producing speech. She dreams of becoming a speech pathologist and helping those who are too often overlooked to find their voice.

COVID-19 didn’t stop Bushra from running. And it’s not stopping her education either.

She’s starting a master’s program at the University of Maryland this fall. “I’ll get a graduation ceremony eventually,” she says.

In the meantime, she’s going to run.


Looking for a way to give back like Bushra?

Register for a virtual sock-rocking 5K

More Recent News


A digital collage features a bright orange background with bold white text reading “CELEBRATE WOMEN’S HISTORY MONTH.” Below, influential women like Malala Yousafzai, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Marie Curie, Michelle Obama, Susan B. Anthony, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and Rosie the Riveter are featured. The lower section includes historical documents, such as a suffragette arrest index, Red Cross journals, feminist comics, and a vintage home budgeting magazine.
03.01.25

March welcomes Women’s History Month. We come together to honor all those who experience life through the lens, body, spirit, and identity of a woman. Explore a few ways you can celebrate Women’s History Month— past, present, future, and fluid— in 2025.

2734
01.31.25

February 1st marks the start of Black History Month. During this time, we have a chance to focus on the significant role Black populations have played in shaping the world and to celebrate their contributions to society that have often gone overlooked.

2725
01.28.25

Any change in administration brings new policy priorities. Recent actions by the federal Administration, Congressional leadership and the Supreme Court outline dramatic policy changes in the years ahead that could negatively affect the people we serve. The agency will be guided by the following principles, consistent with our approach over the past 40 years.

2717
A dark-skinned woman smiles at the camera. She's wearing a blue baseball cap and a yellow t-shirt with the Health Care for the Homeless logo.
01.21.25

Pass the Mic features the voices and stories of people with a lived experience of homelessness. In this edition, hear from Deborah - a US Army veteran, Bingo lover and lifelong volunteer. 

2711

View All News

Copyright © 2025 Health Care for the Homeless.

All Rights Reserved.

OUR HEADQUARTERS

421 Fallsway, Baltimore, MD 21202

Phone: 410-837-5533

FOLLOW US

Facebook LinkedIn Instagram