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120 acres in Malabar Farm State Park named after Doris Duke, protected from logging
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Exhibition at University of Michigan showcases narratives, diversity of Detroit s Muslim community
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Graceway Community Church to provide food for those in need food pantry
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Zeyba Rahman discusses contemporary cross-cultural encounters through music in Fes, Morocco, at the 2015 Arts & Museum Summit.
Zeyba Rahman joined the Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art in 2013 as a senior program officer for the Building Bridges program. In her current role, Rahman manages national grants to support projects that advance relationships, increase understanding, and reduce bias between Muslim and non-Muslim communities. Previously, as a creative director and producer, Rahman led internationally and nationally recognized projects to promote understanding among diverse communities. She has held positions as director of Asia and North America, for the Fès Festival of World Sacred Music; curator of “Mic Check: Hip Hop from North Africa and Middle East,” Brooklyn Academy of Music; creative consultant of public programs for the Arab Lands, Turkey, Iran, Central Asia and Later South Asia Galleries, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; chief curator for World Nomads Mo
Meg Loncharic: Mural project highlights art by Erie s new Americans
Meg Loncharic
Erie Arts & Culture received a grant from the Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art to provide opportunities for Erie artists from Muslim countries so they may gain wider recognition here.
The grant funded school-based residencies, public performances and digital media training for 12 artists, some of whom came to Erie as refugees.
Kelly Armor, Erie Arts & Culture s folklorist in residence, is quick to share news of the grant.
“Especially during COVID, when so much has been canceled, you can still visit these shops, see the art, and support a local business while literally tasting the bounty of Erie’s new-American cultures,” she said.