Tuesday, May 30, 2017
The TF AA’s Once Upon a Hope Program
Currently a resident of Houston, Texas, Jamal Daniel oversees the operations of Crest Investment Company as its chairman. A native of Syria, Jamal Daniel also serves as the founder of the Levant Foundation, a non-profit organization focused on expanding knowledge about the Middle East, its culture, and its history. In 2004, members of the Levant Foundation helped to create the Texan-French Alliance for the Arts (TFAA), alongside the French consul in Houston.
The TFAA implements a number of initiatives with the aim of using the arts to bring people and cultures together. Among these efforts is the Once Upon a Hope program, which offers English students in Houston, Texas, the opportunity to exchange life stories with children in schools in Burkina Faso, a predominantly French-speaking country in Africa.
The project’s goal is to create connections between children of two vastly different cultures, while also raising awareness for the children of Houston in regards to the situation of children who have taken refuge in Burkina Faso.
Friday, May 19, 2017
A Snapshot of Middle Eastern Monotheistic Religions
Jamal Daniel serves as chairman of the Crest Investment Company, managing investments in technology, manufacturing, oil and gas. In his free time, Jamal Daniel also founded the Levant Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing the knowledge of Middle Eastern culture. The group promotes understanding of three monotheistic religions, Judaism, Islam, and Christianity, originating from the Middle East.
Judaism is known as the first monotheistic religion, coming about in the eastern Mediterranean when, as the story goes, Abraham made an agreement with God. Islam and Christianity soon followed, agreeing that Abraham was the world’s first prophet.
As a branch of Judaism, Christianity didn’t really take off until Roman emperor Constantine converted to the religion in 324 C.E. Much like Judaism, many Middle Eastern Christians practice asceticism. Several groups including the Greek Orthodox, Armenian Catholics, and Protestants follow similar customs and rituals.
Islam gained traction in the Middle East in the seventh century C.E. when a group of people who practiced Judeo-Christian traditions and integrated the values of Arabia’s Bedouin tribes settled in Mecca (now called Saudi Arabia). Islam spread into the Byzantine Empire, Europe, South Africa, and Asia, where it continued to grow.
Although these three religions originated from the same place, in the following years, various conflicts have arisen over the interpretation of certain beliefs.
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