At 22, Albert Sebulela’s journey reads like a story of resilience shaped by faith, discipline, and an unrelenting belief in education. Born in Manoke, a small village in Burgersfort, Limpopo, Sebulela grew up where opportunity was scarce and ambition often faded into survival. Many of his peers, he recalls, ended up unemployed or working informally after matric. But Sebulela chose another path. Raised by his grandmother in a Christian household while his parents worked away from home, he found early strength in her prayers and in the guidance of his teachers. Together with close friends, he spent long hours in study groups and Saturday classes, determined to prove that a boy from Manoke could become the first doctor in his family.
When he arrived at Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University in 2022, it was to begin the MBChB Extended Programme. The seven-year journey ahead was daunting, but he accepted the challenge with clarity of purpose. “I reminded myself why I was here,” he says. “To serve my community and to show others that education is a way out.”
That clarity fuelled him through his studies and into student leadership. In 2024, he entered the SMUSSS Literature Review Competition with a paper on diabetic foot sepsis—a subject that carried personal weight, as his father suffers from diabetes. What began as a learning exercise turned into victory, with Albert taking first place. More than the award, it was the discovery of research as a tool to break cycles of disease that marked a turning point. Today, as Research and Academic Officer of SMUSSS, he works to create opportunities for undergraduates to contribute to research, convinced that inquiry must become a defining feature of SMU’s medical training.
Alongside his academic achievements, Sebulela has become a fixture in student leadership. His list of roles is long: Deputy Secretary of the Diagnostic Society, Treasurer of the South African Medical Students’ Union (SMU branch), Manager of the SMU Rugby Male Team, Chairperson of Residence 5B, and Secondary Liaison Officer for the School of Medicine. He also served as a CUTL mentor and Vice Secretary of the Green Campus Initiative. To outsiders, the workload might appear overwhelming, but Sebulela insists that discipline and prayer keep him steady. “My degree is my priority, but leadership builds the character to sustain it,” he explains.
Every step of his journey is anchored by family values. His father’s constant reminder—serve selflessly and do good even when no one is watching—guides how he approaches service, while his grandmother’s prayers, he says, are the foundation of his resilience. Faith remains his compass, with verses such as Jeremiah 1:5 and Joshua 1:8–9 shaping his confidence and resolve.
Looking to the future, Sebulela dreams of becoming a cardiothoracic surgeon. Inspired by figures like Professor Risenga Chauke, Dean of the SMU School of Medicine, he hopes to leave the kind of impact that his mentors have had on both patients and students.
For young people from under-resourced backgrounds, his message is unwavering: believe in yourself, create opportunities where none exist, and serve others selflessly. His story, still in its early chapters, is proof that resilience and vision can transform adversity into triumph.
By Tumelo Moila