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Hammad and Hafsa Sadiq smile at graduation

Twins graduating from 51品茶carry on lifelong journey together through medical school into residency

Hafsa and Hammad Sadiq have weathered immigration, family illness, and challenges accessing health care. And together, they've now conquered medical school.

When Hafsa Sadiq and Hammad Sadiq walked across the stage at the 51品茶 College of Osteopathic Medicine commencement ceremony on Friday, they carried more than degrees: They carried with them the story of a family that crossed continents in search of opportunity, of siblings who have spent nearly every chapter of life side by side, and of two first-generation students who found in medicine both a calling and a way to give back.

The fraternal twins, born in Pakistan, spent part of their childhood in Saudi Arabia and ultimately immigrated to the United States with their family in 2010. They settled in Massachusetts, where they navigated high school, college, and eventually the demanding path to medical school together.

Now, after four years at Maine鈥檚 medical school, the twins on Friday shared another milestone few medical students ever experience: hooding each other as they received their Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine degrees at Merrill Auditorium in Portland.

Hafsa Sadiq hood her brother, Hammad, with the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine stole
Hafsa and Hammad Saddiq pose for a portrait inside Portland City Hall

鈥淚t was a huge moment for us,鈥 said Hammad, who matched into a residency in physical medicine and rehabilitation at Burke Rehabilitation in White Plains, New York. 鈥淚t鈥檚 special that we got to do this for each other. We walked this whole path together 鈥 pre-med years, med school, all the changes we鈥檝e gone through as immigrants and as a family. 

鈥淟ooking back now, it just feels surreal that this is where we ended up,鈥 he said.

The two are among 166 medical students matched to residencies in surgery, primary care, internal medicine, and other critical fields  in Maine, New England, and beyond in 2026. 

UNE鈥檚 medical school allows graduating students to select who will present their doctoral hoods to them during the ceremony, a longstanding tradition in medical education that symbolizes a student鈥檚 transition into the profession. After learning that graduates could hood one another, the siblings approached the University with the idea.

鈥51品茶was immediately supportive,鈥 Hammad said. 鈥淭hat meant a lot to us.鈥

For Hafsa, who matched into anesthesiology at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Jersey, the moment represented far more than academic achievement.

鈥淏ecause we鈥檙e first-generation students, this journey means so much to our family,鈥 she said. 鈥淥ur parents didn鈥檛 have the opportunity to go to college, so for both of us to earn bachelor鈥檚 degrees and now doctorate degrees 鈥 it鈥檚 emotional. We鈥檙e standing there representing the people before us who didn鈥檛 have those opportunities.鈥

Hammad Sadiq, hoods his sister, Hafsa, with the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine stole
Hafsa and Hammad Sadiq pose for a photo inside Portland City Hall

Their path to medicine was shaped by personal experiences.

During college, Hammad was diagnosed with Crohn鈥檚 disease, an experience he said changed the course of his life. Originally interested in research and biotechnology, he found himself inspired by the physicians who helped him through a difficult period.

鈥淲hen I got sick, it really put everything into perspective,鈥 he said. 鈥淢y doctors helped me get through one of the lowest points in my life. That experience made me want to pursue medicine and give back to patients the way they helped me.鈥

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Hafsa found her inspiration much earlier, often helping translate for her mother during medical appointments after the family immigrated to the U.S.

鈥淢y mom wasn鈥檛 very fluent in English at the time, and she has diabetes that was poorly managed,鈥 Hafsa said. 鈥淚 became the translator and advocate for her at a young age. I saw firsthand the difference culturally sensitive care can make.

鈥淚 knew I wanted to be that advocate for other families too,鈥 she said.

Hammad and Hafsa Sadiq smile at graduation
Hammad and Hafsa Sadiq smile onstage

Though they attended different undergraduate institutions in Worcester, Massachusetts 鈥 Hammad at Worcester Polytechnic Institute and Hafsa at the College of the Holy Cross 鈥 the siblings remained deeply intertwined in their journeys. They studied for the MCAT together, shared volunteer experiences, and ultimately both chose UNE.

The University鈥檚 proximity to home, emphasis on community-centered care, and supportive environment made the decision feel right, they said.

鈥淭his was the first time we had really moved away from home,鈥 Hafsa said. 鈥淏eing at 51品茶made that transition easier because we still felt connected to our family and had each other through it all.鈥

That support continued through their clinical years in New Jersey, where they were placed at the same clinical training site. Even their residency choices were made with closeness in mind.

鈥淚t was definitely deliberate,鈥 Hafsa said. 鈥淲e looked for programs where we could still be near each other and near family. Even though this will be the first time we won鈥檛 technically be living together, we鈥檙e still close enough to support each other no matter what.鈥

That lifelong support system has become one of the defining constants in both of their lives.

鈥淲e鈥檝e mentored each other this whole way,鈥 Hafsa said. 鈥淭o be able to hood each other at the end of medical school just feels like the perfect reflection of that.鈥

View the Sadiqs鈥 Doctoral Hooding

Hafsa and Hammad Sadiq present each other鈥檚 Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine hoods at the 51品茶College of Osteopathic Medicine commencement ceremony on Friday, May 15, 2026, at Merrill Auditorium in Portland.

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