* HE Sheikha Hind bint Hamad al-Thani attends Amman event held under QF and TED’s Arabic language initiative
 
The importance of harnessing human potential to solve global challenges has been emphasised at the second regional event to take place under TEDinArabic – the global Arabic language initiative established by Qatar Foundation and TED – held in the Jordanian capital of Amman.
The event, and the TEDinArabic initiative, reflect Qatar Foundation (QF)’s efforts to preserve, promote and celebrate the richness of the Arabic language, and its commitment to providing platforms that allow people from all walks of life to share knowledge, perspectives and ideas.


HE Sheikha Hind bint Hamad al-Thani attending the event


Attended by HE Sheikha Hind bint Hamad al-Thani, Vice-Chairperson and Chief Executive of Qatar Foundation, the event was held under the patronage of Crown Prince Al Hussein bin Abdullah II, and attended on his behalf by Ahmad Hanandeh, Jordan’s minister of digital economy and entrepreneurship.


HE Sheikha Hind bint Hamad al-Thani at the event


Held at Al-Hussein Technical University for Business in Amman – an initiative by the Crown Prince Foundation – VIPs and members of the QF’s leadership were joined by international experts and TED speakers, as well as students and graduates from schools and universities throughout the Arab world, including Qatar, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Kuwait and Palestine, who participated in this event with the support of Qatar Museums’ Years of Culture initiative.


Amir Nizar Zuabi


With the event being held under the theme 'Unlocking Potential, Elevating Stories', Ahmad AlMansoor, a teacher at the Innovation Centre at Qatar Academy for Science and Technology – a school under the QF’s Pre-University Education – spoke about the linguistic richness of the Arabic language, and the necessity of enabling Arabic speakers around the world to use the language to unlock their abilities.


Ahmad AlMansoor


"Language to its speaker is like tools for the maker of things,” he said. “The diversity of their tools enables them to decorate their products, and the Arabic language is full of these tools.”
“Arabic speakers have an abundance of lexical and rhetorical vocabulary that enables them to formulate their ideas in the most eloquent and impressive ways,” AlMansoor said. “Today, we affirm our invitation to our children and the people of this language to continue investing and benefiting from its various tools, and the responsibility falls on us to help them see the colours of the language, and for these colours to be a tool for expressing their ideas and scaling up their abilities."


Muna al-Kurd


The regional TEDinArabic event in Jordan saw the launch of the first edition of the “Share Your Ideas with TEDinArabic” platform, through which 16 speakers from throughout the Arabic-speaking world will be chosen to discuss their ideas, as creative change-makers, in TED Talks at a flagship TEDinArabic event in March 2023 in Doha.
Speaking at the Amman event – which was held with Mais Nobani as presenter, and follows the first regional event held at QF’s WISE Summit in Qatar in December 2021 – Palestinian writer and artistic director Amir Nizar Zuabi told the story of the journey of his artwork 'Little Amal', a giant doll representing a refugee child which has traveled 8,000km across Europe to deliver a message about the plight of refugees.


Sheikha al-Jassasi


"Amal’s journey started because we needed to honour and respect those millions of people who were displaced and became refugees," Zuabi told the TEDinArabic audience. "We wanted to shed light on the difficulties and challenges that refugees go through, and celebrate their ability to overcome difficulties and their determination to search for a new life.”
"Reducing a human being to a political title strips them of their privacy, strips them of everything they own, and makes them a number only,” he said. “We wanted to tell Amal’s human story: the story of a Syrian child who became a refugee because she got lost in the fog of war."


A view of the audience


Also among the speakers was Sheikha al-Jassasi, the first visually impaired Omani to obtain an MBA from the University of Bedfordshire in the UK, who talked about the challenges she faced in her education and career, how she overcame them, and the *Noor podcast she launched in Arabic to help the blind and visually impaired community.
"Visual impairment is not easy, and anyone who overcomes it is not necessarily a superhuman, but a person who fought and received help and support from their family and society to live their life and achieve their ambition," she said.
"I graduated with a Bachelor's degree in translation and a Masters of Business Administration,” al-Jassasi continued. “Today, I am a government employee working in translation and business administration, I still have ambitions and a lot to give and accomplish. Our responsibility remains to spread awareness and the knowledge we have gained."
Palestinian activist Muna al-Kurd was also among the participants at the event, which featured a series of activities, including eight “Unlocking Potential” workshops organised by Jordanian and Qatari partners, a QF mural, and an exhibition about art, innovation and storytelling.
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