صاحب الرسالة الأخلاقية الواضحة التي يبثها عبر قنوات روتانا أراد أن يعزز الفكر الإسلامي في الغرب ، فتبرع ب40مليون دولار لجامعتين أمريكيتين من أجل دعم البرامج الإسلامية والأبحاث حول الإسلام .
By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN
The Associated Press
Monday, December 12, 2005; 11:53 PM
BOSTON -- A Saudi prince believed to be the wealthiest businessman in the Muslim world has donated $40 million for Harvard and Georgetown to expand their Islamic studies programs, the schools announced Monday.
Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Alsaud, who gave $20 million to each university, is a nephew of the late King Fahd and worth upward of $20 billion, according to Forbes magazine, which ranked him fifth on its 2005 list of the world's billionaires.
Harvard and Georgetown officials said they will use the gifts to add faculty and scholarships and expand their Islamic studies curricula.
"Bridging the understanding between East and West is important for peace and tolerance," Prince Alwaleed said in a statement issued by both schools.
Harvard, which is naming its newly created program after Alwaleed, already has more than two dozen faculty researching or teaching in the field of Islamic studies.
"This program will enable us to recruit additional faculty of the highest caliber, adding to our strong team of professors who are focusing on this important area of scholarship," Harvard President Lawrence Summers said in a statement.
Georgetown will use the gift, the second-largest in its history, to expand its Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding. The center, which was founded in 1993, also will be renamed after Alwaleed.
"At this time of world conflict, Georgetown is committed to build upon our role as a Catholic, Jesuit institution in fostering greater understanding among religions around the world," said the university's president, John DeGioia.
Harvard plans to use its gift to launch the Islamic Heritage Project, which will digitally preserve Islamic texts and make them available on the Internet.
Georgetown plans to endow three new faculty chairs and expand its center's library.
Alwaleed is an investor who chairs the Kingdom Holding Co