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Militant Islam Monitor > Weblog > Pimping for the Profit :World Economic Forum as Saudi Da'wa front 'West Islamic World Dialouge' aka Western Islamic World Da'wa

Pimping for the Profit :World Economic Forum as Saudi Da'wa front 'West Islamic World Dialouge' aka Western Islamic World Da'wa

January 19, 2006

MIM: Wahhabism has become institutionalised at the World Economic Forum with the advent of the 'West Islamic World Dialouge' ( aka Da'wa)- a Saudi run initiative designed to promote Islamist economic interests and establish a Khalifate under the guise of "understanding and cooperation between Western countries and countries with predominently Muslim populations". The list of members reads like a Who's Who of Islamist individuals and organisations, together with the usual array of 'useful idiots' who have been recruited to add legitimacy to yet another vehicle for Saudi interests and to lure investors into helping anti Western Islamists prosper. The directors of the group are the usual suspects - aka Saudi Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal whose Kingdom Holding Company funds suicide bomber families, and Prince Turki Faisal Al Saud, whose Center for Research and Islamic Studies could more aptly be dubbed Da'wa Inc.

Adding insult to injury, the Wahhabists running the forum have cynically appealed for funding for terror linked charities like the UK Islamic Relief (which was linked to Al Qaeda), under the guise of combatting extremism with compassion (!).

MIM: The 'West Islamic Dialouge's blatantly Wahabbist agenda is further revealed through their program to teach Muslims how to manipulate and put a spin on news about Islam in the media. In order to dupe the non Muslim particpants in the dialouge this propaganda ploy is spun as a welfare project meant to help " predominantly Muslim countries expressed a desire to learn how to better engage Western mass media so that they could become a resource for commentary on Islamic-Western relations, particularly during times of crisis..."

This obvious reference to Islamist missionising is euphemistically referred to as "Outreach training for reconciliation activists". The goal of the 'West Islamic Dialouge' to bring about a Khalifate, is clearly seen in the project which is bears the title "Muslim World Leaders of Tommorrow". "...The mission of the MLT is to foster a unified, uniquely American voice of Islam capable of accelerating the development of a healthy Islamic identity that is both western and closely connected to Muslim communities worldwide..."

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MIM: What better way to combat terrorism then to fund those who perpetrate it? A visit to the Islamic Relief website reveals webpages full of one parent 'orphans' and their extended families with the information that their fathers died of 'conflict related causes'.

http://www.weforum.org/site/homepublic.nsf/Content/West-Islamic+World+Dialogue%5CProjects


A. Combating Extremism with Compassion: Concern that charitable giving might be redirected to terrorist organizations has caused a sudden drop in donations from individuals and foundations to charities in Muslim countries worldwide. The largest Muslim charity based in the West, UK-based Islamic Relief, seeks to mobilize non-governmental aid agencies, multi-lateral institutions, and government development and foreign policy bureaus to address this problem. Initially, Islamic-Relief seeks strategic cooperation in building political support for a working meeting, likely to be held in Cairo in May 2005 and, eventually, a UN conference on the subject. If successful, this initiative will generate mechanisms that allow funds to flow again to organizations that improve the lives of needy populations in Muslim countries, while addressing legitimate security and transparency concerns of governments, donors, and partners. Approved by the C-100 and further developed through a closed strategy session (Davos 2005). The C-100 Secretariat is preparing a report of this meeting and working with the participants to establish a working group to advance the action points to which they agreed. Updates will be provided to C-100 participants as the project develops. Project update

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. Media Outreach Training for Reconciliation Activists: At a meeting convened by HRH Prince Hassan bin Talal in 2003, leaders of interfaith and intercultural dialogue centres in the US and in predominantly Muslim countries expressed a desire to learn how to better engage Western mass media so that they could become a resource for commentary on Islamic-Western relations, particularly during times of crisis. Included in the meeting were the Centre for Civilizational Dialogue (Malaysia), Majlis el-Hassan (Jordan), the Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding (Washington, DC), the Media and Dialogue Center (Kuwait), the Interfaith Center (New York), the Institute for Interfaith Dialogue (Indonesia), among others. The C-100 seeks to meet this demand by engaging a public relations firm to provide trainings in several hub-cities in the West and in predominantly Muslim countries for advocates of Islamic-Western understanding. Drawing on the C-100 network, European dialogue centres seeking to improve their public outreach capacity would be invited to participate as well. Trainings would include basic media outreach skills, including preparing press releases, writing op-eds, cultivating relations with the media, and interviewing techniques. Approved by the C-100 (Davos 2005).

. Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow: The ASMA Society's Cordoba Initiative proposes to convene young Muslim leaders from the US and the broader Muslim world to expand its network of Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow (MLT). The mission of the MLT is to foster a unified, uniquely American voice of Islam capable of accelerating the development of a healthy Islamic identity that is both western and closely connected to Muslim communities worldwide. MLT will act as a platform and network of emerging young Muslim leaders who are committed to this mission and have the capacity to act as change agents. With funding from the National Center for Community and Justice, ASMA launched the MLT in December 2004, convening 100 emerging Muslim American leaders, ages of twenty-five to forty-five, for a retreat in New York. ASMA now seeks to expand this network by convening two meetings, in New York and Amman, of 100 Muslim American youth leaders and 100 Muslim youth leaders from other countries around the globe. These meetings will build the MLT's leadership skills in media relations, social justice advocacy, and education; while providing a forum for them to develop action plans around shared concerns and the improvement of Islamic-Western relations. This network would energize intra-Muslim dialogue while building the capacity of Muslim Americans to play a larger role as spokespeople and leaders in American society and in the global Muslim community. Approved by the C-100 (Davos 2005).

For a complete list of projects see below:

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Council of 100 Leaders (C-100)
Promoting dialogue and cooperation between the Western and Islamic worlds

The World Economic Forum's West-Islamic World Dialogue (C-100) is a community that promotes understanding and cooperation between Western countries and countries with predominantly Muslim populations. It convenes senior political, religious, business, media and opinion leaders in an effort to better understand their differences and act on their commonalities.

This community relies in particular on the pragmatic dynamism of the business community as a powerful enabler of positive change.

The Council is chaired by:


Vision & objectives

The C-100 envisions a state of Islamic-Western relations in which differences are discussed openly, shared interests are advanced cooperatively, distinct cultures and perspectives are better understood and appreciated, and an over-riding respect for our shared humanity and dignity is reflected in all interactions, even as we deal with our most contentious differences.

To realize this vision, the C-100 seeks to engage Western and Islamic societies with the following objectives:

  • Improve knowledge and understanding within and across cultures
  • Identify and address key misunderstandings and the forces that drive discord
  • Promote cooperation and partnership based on mutual respect and shared interests
Genuine dialogue is necessary for informed action, and cooperative action is necessary if dialogue is to have a broader impact on societies. The C-100 pursues its objectives through two tracks.

Track one: Discourse - sustaining in-depth dialogue

Starting from an analytical base, the C-100 facilitates dialogue between its members that is punctuated by intensive discussions at its Annual Meetings. These discussions bond C-100 members into a community and provide the analytical basis upon which they choose projects to pursue together.
Discourse from Jordan 2004 (PDF; 9 pgs; 64K)
Discourse from Davos 2005 (PDF; 12 pgs; 85K)
Discourse from Jordan 2005 (PDF; 4 pgs; 108K)


Track two: Projects - catalyzing cooperative action

Update June 2005 (PDF; 2 pages: 106k)

Recognizing that many organizations are engaged in building Islamic-Western cooperation, the C-100 has narrowed its focus in three ways.

First, it supports existing projects that could benefit from exposure to the Forum's unique network, and supports new projects where the C-100 brings a particular added value to existing efforts.

Second, given the Forum's global scope, the C-100 seeks Islamic-Western cooperative projects that aim for highly-leveraged impact across multiple countries, that involve genuine cooperation between institutions based in the West and in predominantly Muslim countries, and that draw on the Forum's network of leaders from all walks of life (business, government, religion, the media, academia and civil society).

Third, the C-100 has identified four strategic themes along which it seeks to support Islamic-Western cooperation:

  • Amplifying Thoughtful Voices
  • Demonstrating Cooperation Through Pop- and High-Culture
  • Connecting Key Communities
  • Facilitating Cooperation on Major Issues of Shared Concern

Projects I Submit your project proposal (PDF; 3 pgs; 156K)

Contact Information
Saman Ahsan
Project Manager (overall coordinator)
Email: [email protected]

Alistair Macdonald-Radcliff
Senior Advisor, Sustaining In-Depth Dialogue
Email: [email protected]

Hady Amr
Senior Advisor, Catalyzing Cooperative Action
Email: [email protected]

The World Economic Forum is pleased to acknowledge Xenel /Saudi Cable Company and HRH Prince Alwaleed bin Talal bin Abdulazziz Al Saud, Chairman of Kingdom Holding Co., Saudi Arabia as Initiative Partners providing support to the C-100.

To link to this webpage please use http://www.weforum.org/c100

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MIM: All Da'wa all the time:

http://www.weforum.org/site/homepublic.nsf/Content/West-Islamic+World+Dialogue%5CProjects

Projects

The C-100 Secretariat created a project submission process and started receiving project proposals along strategic themes. A number of projects have either been approved by the C-100 or designated for further elaboration. A synopsis of each project including its current status is found below:


I. Amplifying Thoughtful Voices

A. Common Ground News Service (CGNews): CGNews is a list-serve based distribution mechanism for print editorials and opinion pieces that promote constructive views on conflicts in the Middle East. Distributed weekly in Arabic, Hebrew, and English, CGNews has placed over 1,000 articles in some of the region's largest-circulation newspapers over the past three years. CGNews' success lies in its approach of partnering with editors of major publications to provide articles that meet their readers' interests while promoting constructive solution-oriented perspectives. Established by the international non-profit Search for Common Ground and funded by the Dutch and Danish Foreign Ministries and the Arca Foundation, CGNews now seeks to expand into a global news service of Islamic-Western understanding. This entails adding editors to increase placement of articles in European and American publications, quadrupling the number of commissioned articles; and adding French, Farsi, Urdu, and Bahasa-language editions. The expanded CGNews will still be demand-driven, responding to the needs of editors of existing papers, rather than establishing a new outlet that competes with them for readers. Approved by the C-100 (Jordan 2004).

B. Media Outreach Training for Reconciliation Activists: At a meeting convened by HRH Prince Hassan bin Talal in 2003, leaders of interfaith and intercultural dialogue centres in the US and in predominantly Muslim countries expressed a desire to learn how to better engage Western mass media so that they could become a resource for commentary on Islamic-Western relations, particularly during times of crisis. Included in the meeting were the Centre for Civilizational Dialogue (Malaysia), Majlis el-Hassan (Jordan), the Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding (Washington, DC), the Media and Dialogue Center (Kuwait), the Interfaith Center (New York), the Institute for Interfaith Dialogue (Indonesia), among others. The C-100 seeks to meet this demand by engaging a public relations firm to provide trainings in several hub-cities in the West and in predominantly Muslim countries for advocates of Islamic-Western understanding. Drawing on the C-100 network, European dialogue centres seeking to improve their public outreach capacity would be invited to participate as well. Trainings would include basic media outreach skills, including preparing press releases, writing op-eds, cultivating relations with the media, and interviewing techniques. Approved by the C-100 (Davos 2005).


II. Facilitating Cooperation on Major Issues Of Shared Concern

A. Combating Extremism with Compassion: Concern that charitable giving might be redirected to terrorist organizations has caused a sudden drop in donations from individuals and foundations to charities in Muslim countries worldwide. The largest Muslim charity based in the West, UK-based Islamic Relief, seeks to mobilize non-governmental aid agencies, multi-lateral institutions, and government development and foreign policy bureaus to address this problem. Initially, Islamic-Relief seeks strategic cooperation in building political support for a working meeting, likely to be held in Cairo in May 2005 and, eventually, a UN conference on the subject. If successful, this initiative will generate mechanisms that allow funds to flow again to organizations that improve the lives of needy populations in Muslim countries, while addressing legitimate security and transparency concerns of governments, donors, and partners. Approved by the C-100 and further developed through a closed strategy session (Davos 2005). The C-100 Secretariat is preparing a report of this meeting and working with the participants to establish a working group to advance the action points to which they agreed. Updates will be provided to C-100 participants as the project develops. Project update

B. Religious Criteria of Governance: The ASMA Society's Cordoba Initiative aims to enumerate the societal criteria that the five major world religions require to be fulfilled in a society that is governed according to their respective religious laws. Through five seminars, twelve world renowned religious legal scholars from each of the Hindu, Buddhist, Jewish, Christian and Muslim faith traditions will enumerate what their religious laws say regarding citizens' rights for justice, tolerance, treatment of ethnic and religious minorities, education, help to the poor and disadvantaged, etc. This project will help erase popular notions of the differences between the societal obligations of "secular" and "religious" states in how each governs its citizens and challenge the notion that only a humanitarian secular state articulates these rights. Participants will help determine the extent to which values often attributed to secular traditions of governance are also found in religious traditions, to establish a notion of a global Common Good comprising the common elements from these religious traditions, and to explore how this global Common Good may be utilized in reducing tensions across religious boundaries and across religious and secular communities. The Aspen Institute, the East-West Institute, and the Chautauqua Institute have each expressed a desire to co-host the seminar sessions. Approved by the C-100 (Davos 2005).


III. Connecting Key Communities

A. Religious Leader Study Exchange: The C-100 is working with leaders at Al-Azhar University, the Anglican Communion, and the Roman Catholic Church to assist them in establishing extended Religious Leader Study Exchanges. Promising young scholars and senior clergy would take part in full-term exchanges at one another's seminaries, during which they would engage in shared study, private and public interfaith dialogues, and joint community outreach. The aim is to foster lasting ties between Christian and Muslim clergy, enhance knowledge of one another's faith traditions, strengthen the resolve of religious leaders to advance reconciliation and peace making, and facilitate inter-religious cooperation in promoting justice, serving the less fortunate, and promoting social development. Inclusion of Shi'a and Jewish centres of religious study would be explored pending the results of this initial round of exchanges. Approved by the C-100 (Jordan 2004).

B. Internet-Based University Student Links: The non-profit organization Soliya provides internet-based links between colleges and universities in the Middle East and in the U.S. Students dialogue together and practice developing short documentaries using simple media-development software. The documentaries cover major events at the root of Islamic-Western conflict, such as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the war in Iraq, the Madrid train bombing or the September 11 attacks. Students learn how the same events can be presented differently by the media and use the documentary-production process to discuss why they view these events differently. Students are then invited to co-produce documentaries on issues of shared concern that are marketed to local TV broadcasters in their communities. The pilot project engaging Al-Quds University, Birzeit University, American University of Cairo, the American University of Beirut, the University of Qatar, the American University of Kuwait, Philadelphia University in Amman, Harvard University, Tufts University, Clark College, Virginia Commonwealth University, University of Maine, and Centre College has been funded by the Compton Foundation through mid-2005. Soliya plans to use lessons learned to refine and expand this programme to more universities and religious schools in Europe, the US and additional Arab countries. Students participating in 2004 are being trained to serve as project facilitators and organizers in 2005. Approved by the C-100 (Davos 2005).

C. Youth Leader Exchange: In 2004, Seeds of Peace launched "Beyond Borders/Bila Al Hodood: Arabs and Americans in the 21st Century." Beyond Borders brings together 62 young leaders and 23 education officials from 6 American cities and 6 Arab countries—namely Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Egypt, Jordan, and Yemen—for cultural and political exchange in both the US and the Middle East. In August 2004, this group spent two weeks at the Seeds of Peace International Camp in Maine. Participants engaged in serious, honest, and open discussions on the complex issues facing the US and the Middle East. In March 2005, all participants will reconvene in the Middle East to continue their efforts and deepen their understanding on core issues through site visits, discussions with field experts, and interaction with Arab and American political figures. Having had firsthand experiences in both the US and the Middle East, the group will be uniquely equipped to engage and educate their communities and others, providing a ripple effect that will reach many more. Seeds of Peace seeks to expand Beyond Borders in its second year, dramatically increasing the number of participants and engaging young people in such countries as Lebanon, Syria, Bahrain, and the UAE among others. Approved by the C-100 (Davos 2005).

D. Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow: The ASMA Society's Cordoba Initiative proposes to convene young Muslim leaders from the US and the broader Muslim world to expand its network of Muslim Leaders of Tomorrow (MLT). The mission of the MLT is to foster a unified, uniquely American voice of Islam capable of accelerating the development of a healthy Islamic identity that is both western and closely connected to Muslim communities worldwide. MLT will act as a platform and network of emerging young Muslim leaders who are committed to this mission and have the capacity to act as change agents. With funding from the National Center for Community and Justice, ASMA launched the MLT in December 2004, convening 100 emerging Muslim American leaders, ages of twenty-five to forty-five, for a retreat in New York. ASMA now seeks to expand this network by convening two meetings, in New York and Amman, of 100 Muslim American youth leaders and 100 Muslim youth leaders from other countries around the globe. These meetings will build the MLT's leadership skills in media relations, social justice advocacy, and education; while providing a forum for them to develop action plans around shared concerns and the improvement of Islamic-Western relations. This network would energize intra-Muslim dialogue while building the capacity of Muslim Americans to play a larger role as spokespeople and leaders in American society and in the global Muslim community. Approved by the C-100 (Davos 2005).

E. Mid-Career Professionals Exchange: The 21st Century Trust proposes to convene four meetings of leaders under the age of 40 in business, government, NGOs, academe, the media and other sectors from the West and from predominantly Muslim countries. Following an initial two-day consultation in Cairo entitled Islam and the West: framing the dialogue, during which participants would identify key issues to address in the coming three sessions, 25 participants would meet for one week each to focus on one of the following three themes in each of the locations noted: Religion and modernity: how far is globalization a threat to faith communities? (Ifrane, Morocco); Governance, minorities, and human rights: seeking commonalities, acknowledging differences (Oxfordshire, UK); a week in October 2006; In the face of terror: how can the international community re-build peace? (Amman, Jordan). Participants would be invited to become members of the 21st Century Trust Fellowship, a network of over 1,000 individuals from 100 countries who engage in an ongoing series of conferences, debates and discussions about the pressing questions of the world. Approved by the C-100 (Davos 2005).

IV. Demonstrating Cooperation Through Pop- and High-Culture

A. Reconciliation Reality Television: Capitalizing on the popularity of "reality" television formats, the C-100 Secretariat is in discussion with television broadcasters for the production of the first reconciliation reality TV programme, for broadcast in Europe, the U.S., and in the Arab world. The programme will feature Europeans and Americans of diverse socio-economic and religious backgrounds mixed with similarly diverse Muslim participants from five predominantly Muslim countries in the Middle East and Southeast Asia. Participants in the TV show will face challenges that require cooperation for them to prevail, punctuated by dialogue and reflection on the personal and political differences that they confront as they get to know and rely on one another. The programme would be developed with sensitivity to diverse cultural norms in order to gain the broadest possible viewership. The aim would be to produce a TV programme that attracts millions of viewers in the US, Europe, and the Muslim world, who would be rooting for (for example) Egyptian, Iranian, Indonesian, Saudi, American, and European contestants to prevail together in the face of obstacles. The programme would offer venues for audience interaction through text-messaging and internet-based dialogue around the show. Approved by the C-100 (Davos 2005).

B. Arabic Literary Heritage Trust: Amsterdam-based DecoType seeks to disseminate, in hard copy and through the internet, a corpus of classical Arabic literature in the West and in predominantly Muslim countries, in accurate Arabic text and in parallel editions in selected languages. This project addresses the lack of an Arabic-language equivalent to, e.g., the British Penguin/Pelican publications – affordable, high-quality selections from the English Literary Heritage, made affordable and available to a vast public. An Academic Committee consisting of senior academics in Arabic Literature and Culture will identify key texts, locate original manuscripts and define the method for editing the texts. A Digitization Committee will develop a system for the electronic reproduction of the original document and production in both internet and hard-copy versions. The Trust will then issue tenders for each title, inviting bids from academic institutions capable of returning the text to the Trust in a form ready for electronic publication. The Trust shall also issue tenders for a library edition of each title to be produced and distributed from the standard exclusive electronic layout. Finally, for each title that passes through this process, the Trust shall issue tenders for translation into the main European languages, Bahasa Indonesia and Urdu. Approved by the C-100 (Davos 2005).

C. Multi-Media Educational Materials On Islam Past and Present:
Working with distinguished academic advisers, ORTV, an independent British documentary production company, plans to produce On Islam Past and Present, a multi media project consisting of a series of thirteen half-hour videos, interactive website and accompanying print material, exploring the history, philosophy, arts, core beliefs, and rich diversity of Islamic cultures and civilizations, past and present. The materials would be used as an educational tool at university and senior high school levels and as a resource for a general audience seeking a better understanding of Islam and its place in history and today's world. The project is to provide an accurate, informative and artistic inquiry into the nature of the Islamic faith and the expressions of the faithful and to encourage authentic discourse over rhetoric and misconception. ORTV plans to partner with American University's Centre for Global Peace, Keybridge Films, AMIDEAST, and Open University Worldwide, in addition to individual web and documentary producers. Approved by the C-100 (Davos 2005).


Project Feedback Process
Following the presentation of the new projects during the C-100 deliberations at the Annual Meeting 2005, we received feedback forms the assembled participants, with all projects receiving overwhelming support. Constructive feedback and requests by participants to be directly involved in some projects were also collected and are being forwarded to the organizations that submitted the proposals. The C-100 Secretariat is now seeking funds for these projects and connecting organizations to prospective donors as opportunities arise.

As a model for the future, the process of inviting project proposals, gathering feedback from C-100 participants, and then making final decisions within the C-100 Core Group seems efficient and productive. At the same time, the C-100 Secretariat will not have the capacity to advance the volume of projects that will accumulate if ten or more new projects are accepted at every C-100 meeting. Therefore, in the future, we will institute a system for C-100 participants and the Core Group to prioritize projects rather than simply vote "for" or "against" them.

We welcome your feedback and involvement as we seek to develop the C-100 Action Track.


For further information please contact:

Saman Ahsan
Project Manager (overall coordinator)
Email: [email protected]

Alistair Macdonald-Radcliff
Senior Advisor, Sustaining In-Depth Dialogue
Email: [email protected]

Hady Amr
Senior Advisor, Catalysing Cooperative Action
Email: [email protected]

http://www.weforum.org/site/homepublic.nsf/Content/West-Islamic+World+Dialogue%5CCore+Group+and+Members

Core Group and Members


Core group

Co-chairs
Lord Carey of Clifton, Former Archbishop of Canterbury, United Kingdom
H.R.H. Prince Turki Al Faisal Al Saud, Ambassador of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to the USA

Business
Khalid A. Alireza, Chairman, Xenel/Saudi Cable Company, Saudi Arabia
Geda Condit, Owner, Storybook Partners, USA
Thomas Pickering, Senior Vice President, International Relations, The Boeing Company, USA
Muna Abu-Sulayman, Executive Manager, Strategic Studies, Kingdom Holding Co., Saudi Arabia

Public Figures
Katherine Marshall, Director and Counsellor to the President, World Bank, Washington DC
Jan Petersen, Member of Parliament, Norway

Religious leaders
Diarmuid Martin, Archbishop of Dublin, Ireland
Rabbi David Rosen, President, The International Jewish Committee for Interreligious Relations, USA
Abdullah O. Nasseef, President, World Muslim Congress, Saudi Arabia

Academic leaders
John L. Esposito, Founding Director, Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding, Georgetown University, USA
Heba R. Ezzat, Lecturer, Cairo University, Egypt
Farhan Nizami, Prince of Wales Fellow in the Study of the Islamic World, Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies, United Kingdom

Media leader
Jihad B. Khazen, Director, Al Hayat Newspaper, United Kingdom

Civil society
Shamil Idriss, United Nations Alliance of Civilizations

From the World Economic Forum
Monica Lodygensky, Senior Project Manager, C-100 Initiative
Alistair Macdonald-Radcliff, Senior Advisor, C-100 Initiative
Richard Samans, Managing Director, Global Institute for Partnership and Governance


Members

Ahmed K. Aboulmagd Commissioner, Dialogue of Civilizations, League of Arab States, Egypt
Mohammad H. Adeli Ambassador of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Kingdom
Mahfuz Anam Editor and Publisher, The Daily Star, Bangladesh
Kamel Al-Sharif Secretary-General of the International Islamic Council for Da'wa and Relief, Egypt
Khalid A. Alireza Chairman, Xenel/Saudi Cable Company, Saudi Arabia
Abdulaziz Othman Altwaijri Director General, Islamic Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (ISESCO), Morocco
Anastasios Archbishop of Tirana and All Albania, Albania
Mouneer Anis Bishop, Diocesan Office, Egypt
André Azoulay Counsellor to His Majesty King Mohammed VI of Morocco
Osman Bakar Founder, Centre For Civilizational Dialogue, University of Malaya, Malaysia
Hany El-Banna President, Islamic Relief, United Kingdom
François Burgat Associate Fellow, Institut de Recherches et d'Etudes sur le Monde Arabe et Musulman (IREMAM), France
Nick Butler Group Vice-President, Policy Development, BP, United Kingdom
Lord Carey of Clifton Former Archbishop of Canterbury, United Kingdom
Hasan Cemal Columnist, Milliyet Newspaper, Turkey
Mustafa Ceric Grand Mufti of Bosnia, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Geda Condit Independent Business Person, Cascade Restoration Company, USA
Mazen S. Darwazeh Chairman, Hikma Pharmaceuticals, Jordan
Raghida Dergham Senior Diplomatic Correspondent and Columnist, Al-Hayat, New York
Marie-Thérèse Dilami Editor-in-chief, L'Economiste, Morocco
John L. Esposito University Professor of Religion and International Affairs, Founding Director, Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding, Georgetown University, USA
Heba R. Ezzat Lecturer, Cairo University, Egypt
David Ford Regious Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
M. Shafik Gabr Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Artoc Group for Investment & Development, Egypt
Shafeeq Ghabra President, American University of Kuwait, Kuwait
C. Welton Gaddy President, The Interfaith Alliance, USA
Massimo Gaggi Deputy Edito-in-Chief, Corriere Della Sera, Italy
Marc Gopin Director, Center for World Religions, Diplomacy and Conflict Resolution, Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, USA
A.C. Grayling Reader in Philosophy, Birkbeck College, University of London, United Kingdom
Julien Hawary Managing Director, Arabies Trends, France
Azizah H. Al-Hibri Professor, T.C. Williams School of Law, University of Richmond, USA
Shamil Idriss UN Alliance of Civilizations, USA
Josiah Idowu-Fearon Archbishop of Kaduna, Nigeria
Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu Secretary General, Organization of the Islamic Conference, Saudi Arabia
Abdul M. Al-Jaber Executive Chairman of the Board, Palestine Telecommunications (PALTEL), Palestinian Authority
Irene Khan Secretary-General, Amnesty International, United Kingdom
Asma Khader Minister of Culture of Jordan
Jihad B. Khazen Director, Al Hayat Newspaper, United Kingdom
Hamza B. Al Kholi Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Hamza Alkholi Group, Saudi Arabia
Samer S. Khoury Executive Vice-President, Operations, Consolidated Contractors Company (CCC), Greece
Abdulla Bin Saleh Al-Khulaifi President, University of Qatar, Qatar
Jim Kolbe Congressman from Arizona (Republican), USA
Hans Küng President, Global Ethic Foundation, Germany
Daniel Lubetzky President, PeaceWorks Foundation, USA
Khaled Al-Maeena Editor-in-Chief, Arab News, Saudi Arabia
Hassan Marican President and Chief Executive Officer, PETRONAS (Petroliam Nasional Bhd), Malaysia
Katherine Marshall Counsellor to the President, Development Dialogue on Values and Ethics, World Bank, Washington DC
Diarmuid Martin Coadjutor Archbishop of Dublin, Ireland
Ali Mazrui Professor in the Humanities and Director, Institute of Global Cultural Studies,
State University of New York (Binghampton), USA
Aaron D. Miller President, Seeds of Peace, USA
Patricia Mitchell President and Chief Executive Officer, PBS, USA
Sir Mark Moody-Stuart Chairman, Anglo American Plc, United Kingdom
Abdullah Omar Nasseef President, World Muslim Congress, Saudi Arabia
Seyyed Hossein Nasr Professor of Islamic Studies, George Washington University, USA
Farhan A. Nizami Director, Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies, United Kingdom
Lubna S. Olayan Chief Executive Officer, Olayan Financing Company, Saudi Arabia
John T. Pawlikowski Professor of Social Ethics, Catholic Theological Union, USA
Jan Petersen Member of Parliament, Norway
Thomas R. Pickering Senior Vice-President, International Relations, The Boeing Company, USA
David Puttnam Chairman, The National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts, United Kingdom
Michael Rake International Chairman, KPMG, United Kingdom
Feisal Abdul Rauf Imam of Masjid al-Farah in New York and President of the American Sufi Muslim Society, USA
Mary Robinson Executive Director, Ethical Globalization Initiative, USA
David Rosen President, International Jewish Committee for Interreligious Relations, USA
John Rowett Secretary-General, The Association of Commonwealth Universities, United Kingdom
Mowaffak Al Rubaie National Security Advisor, Iraq
Lamin Sanneh D. Willis James Professor of Missions and World Christianity Professor of History, Yale University, USA
Mahmood Sariolghalam Professor of International Relations, National University of Iran, Islamic Republic of Iran
Ismail Serageldin Director, Bibliotheca Alexandrina, Egypt
Muzammil H. Siddiqi Director, Islamic Society of Orange County, USA
Faouzi Skali Director General, Fes Saiss Association for Cultural, Social and Economic Development, Morocco
Awraham Soetendorp President, European Region, Progressive Judaism, Liberal Jewish Community, Netherlands
Gunnar Stalsett Bishop of the Church of Norway
Muna Abu-Sulayman Executive Manager, Strategic Studies, Kingdom Holding Co., Saudi Arabia
John M. Templeton President, John Templeton Foundation, USA
H.R.H. Turki Al Faisal Al Saud Ambassador of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to the United Kingdom, Chairman, King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies, Saudi Arabia
Sundeep Waslekar President, Strategic Foresight Group, India
Andrew P.B. White Director, The International Centre for Reconciliation, United Kingdom
Hamza Yusuf Hanson Executive Director, Zaytuna Institute & Academy, USA
Sheikh Fawzi El- Zafzaf President, Permanent Committee for Dialogue among Monotheistic Religions, Alazhar Al Sharif, Egypt
Abdullah Zainal Alireza Minister of State, Saudi Arabia
Walid A. Zalaf Editor-in-Chief, Quds Daily Newspaper, East Jerusalem
Aziz G. Zapsu Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, BIM (Birlesik Magazalar AS), Turkey

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