By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. — By the time she reached her freshman year of high school, Mir McLean had been introduced to Latin and Spanish and French, languages that many of her classmates would continue studying. She chose to follow another path to fulfill her language requirement at Roland Park Country School in Baltimore.
“I wanted something more challenging,” McLean said recently at John Paul Jones Arena, “and I’d heard that Arabic and Mandarin were really hard.”
She considered tackling both but eventually settled on Arabic, taught by Ethan Cooper, and “ended up really liking it,” McLean said, in part because it involved drawing symbols.
Her passion for the language has never faded. Now a fourth-year student at the University of Virginia, McLean is majoring in Middle Eastern Language & Literature, with a concentration in Arabic. She’s also a superb basketball player who ranked third among ACC players in rebounding (9.6 per game) in 2022-23 when she hurt her right knee Jan. 8 against ACC rival NC State.
That injury ended her junior season prematurely, but it didn’t derail McLean’s academic progress. Her interest was piqued when she learned about a four-week summer program in Morocco open to UVA students. It would mean missing the first two weeks of summer basketball practice at JPJ, but when McLean raised with the subject with her head coach, Amaka Agugua-Hamilton’s response was immediate and positive.
“I knew her injury was going to be a longer rehab, and [the Morocco program] gave her a different kind of purpose,” Agugua-Hamilton said. “I thought it was a great opportunity for her to go over there, learn a new culture and continue her studies. Those kinds of opportunities don’t come around very often. I’m a big advocate of exploring the world, as long as it doesn’t interfere with what you need to do, and learning from other cultures and bringing that back.”
Arabic is a “very, very difficult language to learn, and I’m just so impressed,” Agugua-Hamilton said. “Mir is really intelligent, and I’m just impressed that she really dove into that language, that culture, everything about it. That’s why I thought Morocco would be great. Who am I that take that opportunity away or say she can’t go?”
As a senior at Roland Park, McLean was supposed to visit Morocco with her Arabic class, but the COVID-19 pandemic forced the cancellation of that trip. And so when she learned about the immersion program offered through the Arab American Language Institute in Morocco (AALIM), she saw an opportunity she didn’t want to pass up.
“When she was made aware that this was a possibility, she ran with it,” said Georgina Nembhard, the academic coordinator for the UVA women’s basketball team. “When Mir gets an idea, she’s going to see it through. She is blazing her own trail.”
In early June, McLean flew to Morocco, where she joined other students from UVA. The program, for which she received four credits, is based in Meknes, a city in northern Morocco, and she stayed there with a host family. McLean had a roommate, an American student from the University of Mississippi.
The host family had a daughter who spoke a little English and helped translate for her parents, McLean said, but everyone generally spoke Arabic to each other.
On a typical day, McLean said, she’d wake up at 7 a.m., eat breakfast and then walk to school, where she received the undivided attention of her teacher.
“I was the only student in my class, so that was interesting,” McLean said, smiling. “It was just me and my teacher.”


