In this conversation, Tim Levy sits with Dr. Kameel Khan, former UK Tax Court judge, lawyer, academic, and lifelong advocate for rehabilitation and second chances, to explore identity, belonging, and the quiet forces that shape who we become.
Born in Trinidad and Tobago and educated across the UK, Canada, and the United States, Kameel’s life has moved between worlds — law and compassion, structure and nonconformity, authority and humility. He served for 18 years as a judge in the UK Tax Court, taught law at multiple universities, and was a DCI Fellow and Visiting Scholar at Stanford University, experiences that deeply shaped his thinking about justice, responsibility, and human potential. Beyond the courtroom, he is the founder of Project Remake, an initiative that supports ex-offenders in rebuilding their lives through entrepreneurship, dignity, and purpose.
Together, Tim and Kameel reflect on what it means to grow up feeling like an outsider, how early experiences of displacement and difference shape a lifelong inner world, and why compassion, curiosity, and self-reliance often emerge from uncertainty. They explore anger and calm, faith and doubt, ego and humility — and the ways people change when they are finally seen as human rather than defined by their worst moments.
This episode is not about status or achievement.
It’s about understanding who you are beneath the roles you’ve played — and what is worth carrying forward.
If this conversation stayed with you, follow Echoes Across Time wherever you listen to podcasts, and join us as we continue exploring what truly lasts.
Learn more about Kameel’s work with Project Remake at https://www.project-remake.org.uk/.
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