Ghazi Qureshi
Medical doctor turned actor Dr Ghazi Qureshi was born in Bolton, and raised in Manchester, England. The youngest of four siblings Ghazi was, from an early age, eager to pursue a career in medicine. He has devoted much of his life to this altruistic ambition to promote health and wellbeing through working as a doctor.
After graduating from medicine in 2013 Dr Ghazi Qureshi started working as a police surgeon in forensics where he developed a keen interest in the psychosocial aspect of human interaction. Evolving powerful communication skills and body language techniques, he was able to effectively cope with working with the worst 5% of society on a daily basis.
Ghazi does not solely define himself by his academic ambition, he also dedicates much of his time to a significant amount of hobbies. Playing the piano, sketching, painting and sculpting all provide a mellifluous escape from day to day life and allow him to acquire a deep state of mental focus. Ghazi is also proficient in two martial arts namely Wushu and Jeet Kune Do (that Bruce Lee himself developed) which he has stated to have needed in certain life threatening situations.
During a career break in Dubai whilst writing a psychosocial self-help book and working as a motivational speaker Ghazi's elder sister convinced him to audition for a role in the movie War Machine (2017) in which he plays a British officer coping with the rigours of post-traumatic stress disorder. To prepare for the role Ghazi had to develop a new physique and trained in the gym for over 4 months, gaining a six pack and an extra 8 kilograms of muscle.
Since appearing in War Machine (2017), Dr Ghazi Qureshi launched his company Outer Heaven Ltd. He has returned to practicing medicine whilst continuing to write his book on the psychosocial aspect of communication and neuro-linguistic programming. The book itself illustrates Ghazi's maverick leadership style which allows the reader to en stow others with a formidable sense of self-worth and inspiration through a personal belief, that some men were placed on this earth to give, and some men were placed here to take and that inevitably every man dies, but not every man truly lives.
After graduating from medicine in 2013 Dr Ghazi Qureshi started working as a police surgeon in forensics where he developed a keen interest in the psychosocial aspect of human interaction. Evolving powerful communication skills and body language techniques, he was able to effectively cope with working with the worst 5% of society on a daily basis.
Ghazi does not solely define himself by his academic ambition, he also dedicates much of his time to a significant amount of hobbies. Playing the piano, sketching, painting and sculpting all provide a mellifluous escape from day to day life and allow him to acquire a deep state of mental focus. Ghazi is also proficient in two martial arts namely Wushu and Jeet Kune Do (that Bruce Lee himself developed) which he has stated to have needed in certain life threatening situations.
During a career break in Dubai whilst writing a psychosocial self-help book and working as a motivational speaker Ghazi's elder sister convinced him to audition for a role in the movie War Machine (2017) in which he plays a British officer coping with the rigours of post-traumatic stress disorder. To prepare for the role Ghazi had to develop a new physique and trained in the gym for over 4 months, gaining a six pack and an extra 8 kilograms of muscle.
Since appearing in War Machine (2017), Dr Ghazi Qureshi launched his company Outer Heaven Ltd. He has returned to practicing medicine whilst continuing to write his book on the psychosocial aspect of communication and neuro-linguistic programming. The book itself illustrates Ghazi's maverick leadership style which allows the reader to en stow others with a formidable sense of self-worth and inspiration through a personal belief, that some men were placed on this earth to give, and some men were placed here to take and that inevitably every man dies, but not every man truly lives.