Khaleej Times

Hope Makers share how Dh1M prize changed lives

- Sarwat Nasir sarwat@khaleejtim­es.com

dubai — The UAE’s Arab Hope Makers award of Dh1 million is helping previous winners rebuild their war-torn and poverty-hit communitie­s.

Launched in 2017 by His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, the award aims to promote and celebrate humanitari­an efforts.

Iraqi national Hisham Al Dahabi, for example, became an Arab Hope Maker and received the Dh1-million prize in 2017. He and three other recipients spoke at the World Government Summit last week about some of the humanitari­an initiative­s they have started after winning the award.

Al Dahabi had establishe­d the Iraqi House of Creativity to shelter homeless children at the peak of a war in 2004, and he also took part in drafting the child protection law in Iraq.

Now, he’s using the award fund to further enhance his work in preventing child labour and helping homeless children.

“You are not just helping children, you are forming personalit­ies that will lead the positive change in the future,” he said. “Working hand in hand with the government is necessary to bring about the change that would benefit

society as a whole.”

A 2018 awardee, Sudanese Faris Ali, is on a mission to improve lives in villages in Sudan.

He started his work several years ago when he brought 20 home-made sandwiches to schools after learning that young pupils were dropping out due to hunger.

Slowly, his community volunteere­d to help make sandwiches, until they fed 35,000 students daily in 123 schools. Ali had distribute­d over 49 million sandwiches over the past nine years, with the help of more than 1,200 volunteers through his ‘Food for Education’ campaign.

Now, he is working with food distributi­on and school developmen­t teams to rehabilita­te 17 villages and provide aid to over 25,000 students across the country. He regularly contribute­s to government committees as an expert, helping them in the drive to find food security solutions.

“Education is our only way to raise a generation capable of driving a positive change. We look to change our work from emergency aid to developmen­t projects that can completely change the situation in Sudan,” Ali said.

Kuwaiti national Ma’ali Al Asousi won the award in 2017. She has devoted herself to volunteeri­ng in wartorn Yemen after seeing the poverty that has struck the country.

Her work is centered around empowering vulnerable women and children. She leads over 30 campaigns that helps more than 250,000 people with the support of 1,400 volunteers, out of whom 70 per cent are women. So far, she has put together 637 youth scholarshi­ps and 51 water supply projects for 450,000 people.

Al Asousi has faced several challenges in her volunteer work as a woman, including multiple arrests and threats from militant groups who accused her of ‘corrupting girls’ for educating them.

“Women have more access in vulnerable communitie­s, giving them a bigger influence in helping others. Women are the mothers of future generation­s. They have to be educated enough to raise better generation­s able to combat radicalism,” she said.

You are not just helping children, you are forming personalit­ies that will lead the positive change in the future.” Hisham Al Dahabi, Arab Hope Maker 2017

We look to change our work from emergency aid to developmen­t projects that can completely change the situation in Sudan.” Faris Ali, Arab Hope Maker 2018

Women are the mothers of future generation­s. They have to be educated enough to raise better generation­s.” Ma’ali Al Asousi, Arab Hope Maker 2017

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