2 Matches for Ammar Abdulhamid from Washington, District Of Columbia, USA

Ammar A. Abdulhamid Age 53

Silver Spring, MD | Washington, DC

Also known as: Tharwacolamus

Ammar Abdulhamid: A Global Voice for Democracyby Joshua Muravchik   Ammar Abdulhamid, Founder and Director of the Tharwa Foundation, is a leading Syrian human rights and pro-democracy activist as well as a known poet and author.  He enjoys a global reputation as an outspoken advocate for social and political change in Syria and the Broader Middle East and North Africa region.  Ammar leads a grassroots movement in Syria that promotes respect for human rights and political change.  For this, Tharwa works to break the Assad government’s information blockade by enlisting a cadre of local activists and citizen journalists to report on sociopolitical issues in Syria.  The activities of the Tharwa team in Syria serve to galvanize grassroots support and generate enthusiasm for change even as the Syrian government continues its crackdown against its opponents.   As a result of his activities and writings, the New York Times recognized Ammar as “one of the important voices articulating the rising generation’s disenchantment” with the current Syrian Regime, while Newsweekmagazine named him as one of the "most influential personalities" in the contemporary Arab World.    Ammar has briefed President of the United States, testified in front of the U.S. Congress and appears often as an expert commentator in various news media.     Prior to founding the Tharwa Foundation, Ammar served as a fellow with the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institute, and he was a co-founder of Hands Across the Mideast Support Alliance (HAMSA), an initiative to mobilize international grassroots support for democracy activists in the Middle East.   In 2003, Ammar, in partnership with his wife, Khawla Yusuf, herself an activist, established DarEmar, an independent publishing house dedicated to raising the standards of civic awareness in the Arab World.    Together, Ammar and Khawla gathered a following as leading dissidents and advocates for the rights of the disenfranchised and minorities. In September of 2005, in response to their vocal criticism and increasing influence and visibility, the Syrian government forced Ammar and Khawla into exile. They now live in Silver Spring, Maryland, along with their two children, Oula (1986), and Mouhannad (1990).   Meanwhile, the Tharwa regional network of activists continues to expand, taking the Tharwa message for change to other parts of the region, inspiring and assisting young activists searching  for a sense of direction and a vision of a better future.   Joshua Muravchik is a Board Member of the Tharwa Foundation. 

  • #University Of Wisconsin-stevens Point


Ammar Abdulhamid

Washington, DC

Ammar Abdulhamid lives in Washington, DC.


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