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Nihad Awad

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Name
  
Nihad Awad


Religion
  
Islam

Occupation
  
Executive Director

Nihad Awad Family Security Matters


Employer
  
Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)

Organizations founded
  
Council on American–Islamic Relations

Similar People
  
Omar Ahmad, Ibrahim Hooper, Ahmed Yassin, Abdel Aziz al‑Rantisi

Profiles


Nationality
  
Palestinian - American

Education
  
University of Minnesota

Residence
  
United States of America

Video cair executive director nihad awad condemns terror attacks in paris


Nihad Awad (Arabic: نهاد عوض) is the Executive Director and Founder of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).

Contents

Nihad Awad Nihad Awad Ikhras

Nihad Awad on Muslim Civil Rights Issues in America


Early life

Nihad Awad Nihad Awad Cofounder of CAIR Unplugged Portrait of an

Nihad Awad was born in Amman New Camp, a Palestinian refugee camp in Amman, Jordan. He studied at Second Amman Preparatory School for Boys, located at the camp and belongs to UNRWA, and at Salaheddine High School in Achrafieh in Jordan. He moved to Italy and later to the United States to pursue his university studies.

Career

Nihad Awad Nihad Awad Pictures 39Newburgh Sting39 Premieres in NYC

After studying civil engineering at the University of Minnesota in the 1990s, he worked at the University of Minnesota Medical Center. After the Gulf War, he was Public Relations Director for the Islamic Association for Palestine (IAP).

Nihad Awad httpspbstwimgcomprofileimages3021710517ff

In June 1994, IAP President Omar Ahmad and others founded the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), and Awad was hired as the Executive Director. In a March 1994 speech at Barry University, future CAIR Executive Director Awad said in response to an audience question about the various humanitarian efforts in the Palestinian Occupied Territories, "I am in support of the Hamas movement more than the PLO... there are some [Hamas] radicals, we are not interested in those people.” The statement was made before Hamas carried out its first suicide bombing and was designated a terrorist organization by the United States government.

A few days after the September 11 attacks in 2001, Awad was one of a select group American Muslim leaders invited by the White House to join President Bush in a press conference condemning the attacks and acts of anti-Muslim intolerance that followed.

Fundraising Request to Muammar Gaddafi

In April 2011, Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va. cited a 2009 letter sent from Awad, to Muammar Gaddafi asking Gaddafi for funding for a project called the Muslim Peace Foundation at a U.S. House of Representatives Appropriations sub-committee hearing with Robert Mueller. The letter also said, in part, "I am pleased to send to Your Excellency in my name most solemn assurances of thanks and appreciation for the efforts you exert in the service of Islam, Muslims and all mankind through your initiative to teach Islam, spread the culture of Islam, and solve disputes, for which you are known internationally." Steven Emerson criticized the funding request, calling it "hypocritical".,

Awards & honors

  • The Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Centre's "500 Most Influential Muslims 2009"
  • Among 100 of the "World's Most Influential Arabs" for 2010 by Arabian Business magazine
  • References

    Nihad Awad Wikipedia