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Read
Michael's Résumé
“Moderation
will win war” Michael's Op-Ed Piece in The Philadelphia Inquirer
10/04/01
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Michael
Kirtley President and Founder
Hailing
from Bardstown, Kentucky, Michael has spent much of his adult
life in North and West Africa. Thrice selected to the Who’s Who
of International Photojournalists, he has written and photographed
feature stories for such publications as National Geographic,
Newsweek, Time, Life, Stern, Geo, and Paris-Match. An Africa and
Arab World specialist, he has interviewed numerous heads of state,
including former South African President Nelson Mandela, the late
King Hussein of Jordan, and Libyan President Muammar Gaddafi.
He holds a degree in Psychology from Amherst College, Amherst,
MA.
An
inveterate desert enthusiast, Michael has operated an adventure
travel company in the Sahara Desert, an expanse he has traversed
some thirty times. In the late 1980’s he founded The America To
Africa Society (ATA), an organization that created media events
to facilitate image change and counterbalance negative stereotypes
about Africa with positive information about its people. At its
peak ATA had offices in seven countries, including Morocco, Senegal,
France, and the USA.
In
the aftermath of 9/11/01, Michael founded The Friendship Caravan
to nurture understanding among people of diverse cultures: “The
Friendship Caravan proposes that for the world to live in security
America must lead the world humbly, by embracing what we Americans
can learn from others, and by offering America’s founding values
through positive example – not through moralizing and hegemony.
With such an approach I believe we can abate the fires of hatred,
reduce the loss of human life, and weaken the promoters of extremism.
People on all sides can benefit from this respectful sharing of
cultures, and I would like to offer the events of the Caravan
as a spiritual center of reflection about the future of our planet.”
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Adil
Mhammed Naji, Vice-President
A
native of Fez, Morocco, Adil Naji is President and Founder of
Arabesque, Inc. a Design and Interior Decoration firm that specializes
in Moorish Architecture. He also directs business development
and strategic planning for Moresque, Ltd. in Morocco, and has
expanded his companys worldwide network to include offices in
Morocco, the UAE, and the USA, now employing over 200 master artisans,
designers, and consultants.
Adil
came to the United States in 1996 to pursue a business degree.
He was awarded a full athletic scholarship from the University
of the District of Columbia (UDC) for his soccer abilities. He
graduated Magna Cum laude from UDC with a B.S. in Business Administration
and Management in 1999. While at UDC, he was recognized by the
National Honor Society in Business Administration, the National
Consortium for Academics and Sports, and named All American Scholar
for his superior academic achievement. He became an American citizen
in early 2004.
Adil
is currently developing software and a reference book for Moroccan
architectural design and decoration.
In
October 2004, Adil became Vice-President and Board Member of The
Friendship Caravan. Proud to be an American but equally attached
to his Moroccan roots, Adil has committed himself through the
Caravan to his long-held belief that only by overcoming the barriers
of ignorance and building bridges of people-to-people understanding
can true peace be attained. He is dedicated to producing events
that lead to more positive communication between Americans and
Moroccans.
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Ariane
Alzhara Kirtley, Member of the Board
Ariane's
name mirrors her roots, planted firmly on three continents: Kirtley
the American born, Ariane the daughter of a French mother and
Alzhara, "desert flower" in Arabic, signaling that she
blossomed in Africa, the continent she loves above all others.
She
crossed the Sahara Desert for the first time when she was six
months old -- in a basket tied to the back seat of her family's
Land-Cruiser. From those earliest months until she turned ten,
her home was in Morocco, Algeria, Senegal, Mali, Ivory Coast and
Niger.
A
2001 graduate of Yale University, in 2004 she also earned her
Masters in Public Health from Yale. In summer of 2003, she returned
to Niger to intern for CARE International on a breastfeeding promotion
initiative. Further investigation into health issues in Niger
culminated in her Master's thesis on the subject for Yale.
In
May of 2004 Ariane was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship to return
to Niger in order to research the special needs of women and minority
ethnic populations in the Sahel with regard to hygiene and sanitation,
with the hope that the results will be used to inform hygiene
promotion campaigns sponsored by international NGOs.
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Updated:
March 21, 2005
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