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  • Dr. Michael Panitz has been the Rabbi at Temple Israel in Norfolk since 1992. He is currently an adjunct professor at Old Dominion University and Virginia Wesleyan College, and has taught at the College of William and Mary, the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, St. Peter’s College and Queens College. He has authored several scholarly publications and is the recipient of the L. D. Britt Community Builders’ Award of Eastern Virginia Medical School and the Inter-group Builders Award from the National Conference for Community and Justice, among other honors. He is married to Sheila Panitz, and they have three children and two grandchildren.
  • Imam Vernon M. Fareed is a leader in the Muslim Community and is a tireless worker seeking a better life for all people. He serves on several boards and community organizations, among them the Norfolk Education Foundation, the FBI Multi-Cultural Advisory Board, Chair of the Virginia Center for Inclusive Communities, and the largest interreligious organization in the world – the World Conference for Religions and Peace. Imam Fareed is married to Swiyyah Fareed and together they have five children, several grandchildren and a few great grandchildren. He has travelled extensively and is frequently called upon locally and nationally to participate in any number of causes.
  • Phil Newman is a business technologist focused on web enabled technologies. He is Manager of Distributed Products for The Weather Channel In this role, he manages a portfolio of products that reach millions of people every day. He is also a serial entrepreneur with numerous startup business interests. In his career, Phil has led technology development for The Home Depot, Mirant, Earthlink, and Turner Broadcasting. His experiences bridge functions from point of sale, inventory, web portals, content management, energy trading and more. He presented the keynote presentation to the Global Merchant forum describing the benefits of electronic signatures. In September, he will be presenting at AppNation Additionally, he volunteers with Happy Tails Pet Assisted Therapy working with the children at Egleston hospital with his dog Newton. He holds an MBA in Operations Management from Kennesaw State University, a BBA in Management Sciences from the University of Georgia and is also certified by PMI, ITIL, Six Sigma, and ScrumMaster.
  • Sylvia Earle is a world-renowned marine biologist who has pioneered research on marine ecosystems and new technologies for effective operations in the deep sea. In 1970, Earle led Tektite II, Mission 6, the first research team of women aquanauts to live 50 feet below the ocean's surface for two weeks. In 1979, she walked untethered on the sea floor at a depth lower than any woman before or since, setting the women's depth record for solo diving at one thousand meters (3,300 feet), describing the adventure in her 1980 book Exploring the Deep Frontier. Partnering with engineer Graham Hawkes in the 1980s, Dr. Earle started the companies Deep Ocean Engineering and Deep Ocean Technologies to design and build undersea vehicles, like Deep Rover and Deep Flight, that allow scientists to maneuver at previously inaccessible depths. In the 1990s, she served as Chief Scientist of National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),where she was responsible for monitoring the health of the nation's waters and reported on the environmental damage of the burning Kuwaiti oil fields. An expert on the impact of oil spills, Dr. Earle has authored over 100 marine science publications, including Exploring the Deep Frontier, Sea Change, Wild Ocean, and The Atlas of the Ocean. In the midst of this life adventure, Dr. Earle married and raised three children. *Time* magazine named her the first "Hero for the Planet" in 1998 and the Library of Congress has called her a "Living Legend." She has led more than 70 expeditions, logging more than 6,500 hours underwater and is currently an explorer-in-residence at the National Geographic Society. Among her more than 100 national and international honors is the 2009 TED Prize for her proposal to establish a global network of marine protected areas. She calls these marine preserves "hope spots... to save and restore... the blue heart of the planet." Says Dr. Earle, "We've got to somehow stabilize our connection to nature so that in 50 years from now, 500 years, 5,000 years from now there will still be a wild system and respect for what it takes to sustain us."
  • Russell Baker covered politics for *The New York Times* from 1954 to 1962. From 1962 to 1982, he became well known for his "Observer" column where he wrote on a wide range of subjects. He won the Geoge Polk award for commentary and tow Pulitzer Prizes -- one for distinguished commentary and one for his autobiography, *Growing Up*. He went on to replace Alistair Cooke in the 1990s as the host of PBS' *Masterpiece Theater*.
  • Eric Lewis, aka ELEW, is a piano iconoclast who has pioneered a new style of playing that he calls Rockjazz. A winner of the Thelonious Monk International Piano Competition, he has toured the world with Wynton Marsalis and Cassandra Wilson, among other luminaries. He performed at the White House's first-ever poetry jam in 2010.
  • William Wilson served as JFK's Executive Producer for Television during the campaign and went on to become his media advisor in the White House. He was the television producer for six presidential campaigns, including RFK's 1968 run. He has also produced a number of films and Broadway plays.
  • Moustafa Bayoumi is a writer and an associate professor of English at Brooklyn College, City University of New York. He is the author of How Does It Feel to Be a Problem?: Being Young and Arab in America, which was published by The Penguin Press in 2008. How Does It Feel To Be a Problem? won two national awards, an American Book Award and the Arab American Book Award for Non-Fiction, and has also been selected as the common reading by several colleges. Bayoumi has been featured in The Wall Street Journal, The Chicago Sun-Times, and on CNN, FOX News (Detroit), Book TV, and National Public Radio (multiple times), along with several European media outlets (from Sweden, Greece, Germany, Italy, and Switzerland). Bayoumi is also the editor of two books, The Edward Said Reader (2000) and Midnight on the Mavi Marmara: the attack on the Gaza Freedom Flotilla and how it changed the course of the Israel/Palestine conflict (2010). He has published many essays in prominent academic journals, including The Yale Journal of Criticism, Interventions, Transitions, Amerasia, Alif, and Arab Studies Quarterly. He has also written for many popular venues, such as New York Magazine, CNN.com, The Guardian, The London Review of Books, The National, The Village Voice, and The Nation. His essay "Disco Inferno," originally published in The Nation, was included in the collection Best Music Writing of 2006. His essay on being an Arab extra on the set of Sex and the City 2 was recently published in The New York Times Magazine. He currently serves on the Editorial Committee of Middle East Report. His website is www.moustafabayoumi.com.
  • Claudia Bernardi is an installation artist and printmaker whose artwork is impacted by war and the post war period. Born in Argentina, Bernardi was affected by the military junta (1976-1983) that caused 30,000 "desaparecidos". Bernardi participated with the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team exhuming mass graves in investigations of human rights violations. In 2005 Bernardi created the School of Art and Open Studio of Perquin, El Salvador, a community based art project where children, youth and adults work collaboratively. Bernardi is a Professor at the California College of the Arts where she designs classes on art and human rights in Latin America. Her website is www.wallsofhope.org.
  • Mohamed Bourokba, aka Hame, was born in 1975 in Perpignan. He was the fifth in a family of six children, from two different parents. The family settled in France during the 1950s. His Algerian father, who could neither read nor write, spent his life working like a slave in the fields as a farm labourer. After the death of his wife in the early 70s, he remarried quickly for the sake of his three daughters. His new wife, Hame's mother, was twenty years younger than him. She also came from Algeria. She became a housekeeper, learned to read and write, and quickly turned the conditions imposed on her to her advantage. Hame watched movies with his father: spaghetti westerns, Chaplin, stories about the war in Algeria (L'opium et le baton, Chroniques des annees de braise, Les deracines, La Bataille d'Alger). During the holidays he returned home, doing his first paintings there. Men smoked in cinemas, Bruce Lee fought on the screen. Mohamed loved stories: he drew, he read. But when he discovered rap, he grabbed hold of it, but in a scientific way, in order to open doors to the future. He left the province when he passed his bac. And started making money. Wanting to surround himself with images, Hame studied cinema at the Sorbonne. Rap played a big part in his life; he collaborated with the group La Rumeur, which emerged in an environment increasingly weakened by commercialism. He made several videos for the group. After obtaining his masters in film and literature, Hame was awarded a scholarship. He spent a year at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts. Five short films later, Hame returned to France, determined to move to the other side of the camera. He wanted to write and direct films dealing with those subjects that were of greatest importance to him. Je ne suis pas le gardien de mon frere ('I am not my brother's keeper'), his first short film, received the support of CNC and French TV channel Arte, and addresses the subject of post-colonial immigration. Canal Plus has signed him to write a hip-hop musical about integrity and temptation. He has also written a feature film, Faux, the story of an imposter, which he hopes to shoot in 2012. Hame is also working on writing a novel to be published by Les Editions du Seuil. Since 2002, Hame has been involved with a series of legal proceedings which became a political tug of war, and which, due to their novelty, have been covered by the international press (Herald Tribune, El Pais, Frankfurter Allgemeine, Le Monde ). After a pamphlet was published in the magazine La Rumeur, Nicolas Sarkozy, who was then interior minister, filed a complaint against Hame. In his article, the author addressed the issue of insecurity in urban neighborhoods, concentrating on the role of the police and power politics. Hame defended his statements on their merits, citing witnesses that included academics, historians, sociologists and linguists. In the name of freedom of expression, he was acquitted at trial and on appeal. Hame now faces returning to court for the third time. The interior ministry has never before pursued defamation charges so persistently. In 2010, the case remains at large.
  • Since 2005, Chipaumire has toured extensively throughout North America, Europe, and Africa, most recently performing in Bergamo, Italy for the 2010 Takunda Prize, presented by Cesvi, an international humanitarian organization. She is a 2008 New York Dance and Performance (aka "Bessie") Award for her choreographic work Chimurenga; and a 2007 New York Dance and Performance Award in the performance category for her work with Urban Bush Women where she also served as Associate Artistic Director. She has been honored with the Mariam McGlone Emerging Choreographer Award from Wesleyan University Center for the Arts (2007). Chipaumire's work has received funding from the National Dance Project (NDP), Rockefeller MAP Fund, Creative Capital and the National Endowment for the Arts. She is featured in the documentary Movement(R)evolution Africa and the focus of two dance films: Nora, directed by Alla Kovgan and David Hinton and Dark Swan, directed by Laurie Coyle. Chipaumire studied dance formally and informally in her native Zimbabwe, Senegal, USA, Cuba, and Jamaica. She is a graduate of the University of Zimbabwe's School of Law and holds graduate degrees from Mills College of Oakland, CA in dance (MA) and choreography & performance (MFA).
  • Yael Farber is an award-winning director and playwright of international acclaim. She worked extensively at the famous Market Theatre in Johannesburg, winning three BEST DIRECTOR awards in her native South Africa. In 2003 she was named ARTIST OF THE YEAR in recognition of the body of work she had created. She is renowned for socio-politically hard-hitting, powerful works of high artistic standard. Her original texts are published by Oberon Books (London, UK), and the productions have toured across the USA, the UK (including runs in the West End and at the Barbican Theatre), Canada, Australia, Japan, Europe and Africa. She has won a SCOTSMAN FRINGE FIRST AWARD, THE ANGEL HERALD AWARD and A SONY GOLD AWARD. She has been nominated for A DRAMA DESK AWARD in USA; a TMA BEST DIRECTOR AWARD in UK. She is a past invitee of Lincoln Theatre Directors' Workshop, has been a resident artist at Mabou Mines Theatre Company in New York, created a new piece on commission for Haus de Kulttur in der Wereld in Berlin and developed an original text at the Sundance Theatre Laboratory. She is currently Head of the Directing Program at the National Theatre School in Montreal, Canada. Her commissioned adaptation of THE RAMAYANA will play at The Culture Project (NY) next year, as will MOLORA - her radical reworking of the Oresteia Trilogy. Ms. Farber is presently Playwright-in-Residence for Nightwood Theatre (Toronto, Canada) creating an adaptation of Iphigenia, look at Honor Killings. She will take up a short residency at University of Maryland next year, to initiate her adaptation of a King Lear set in the Middle East. Ms. Farber's productions (past, current and upcoming) are created and toured under her company The Farber Foundry.