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ear East Foundation moved from its mid-Manhattan offices
the first of the year, taking advantage of the end
of its lease to benefit from financial incentives designed
to attract occupancy downtown in the aftermath of the
World Trade Center tragedy. Rental costs were
cut nearly in half while square footage remains about
the same at our newly renovated 90 Broad Street, 15th
floor location in lower Manhattan’s Financial
District. It is convenient to public transportation
for both staff and visitors; and a short walk from
historic Bowling Green park with its view of the
Hudson River and Statue of Liberty.

The NEF museum exhibition that debuted at the Museum
of the City of New York in 2003, “Near East/New
York: The Near East Foundation and American Philanthropy,” toured
to the West Coast, opening in October at the Doheny
Memorial Library of the University of Southern California. The
NEF exhibition was on view through January.
In October NEF partnered with ArteEast--a nonprofit
promoting the art and culture of the Middle East
and its diaspora--for the premiere screenings of two
documentary films, one Palestinian, the other Israeli. “Hopefully
for the Best” (2004) by Raed Helou portrays Ramallah
during the tense winter before the US-Iraq war. “Mashallah” (2004)
by Eytan Harris was inspired by the brutal murders
of two cab drivers three days apart in Jerusalem--the
first an Israeli Jew, the second a Palestinian and
the absent subject of the film. The films provoked
a lively, at times passionate, post-screening discussion,
which followed responses by NEF President Ryan LaHurd
and Aissa Deebi, ArteEast’s visual arts director.
The line went around the block for the February joint
Near East Foundation-New York University Middle East
Studies Department event. Participants filled
all seats, and unfortunately the Greenwich Village
theatre could not accommodate all who wanted to attend. The
overflow audience came for a screening of the documentary
film, “Control Room,” about the Al Jazeera
television network, the Arab world’s most powerful
broadcaster at work during the Iraq war. It was
followed by a roundtable discussion including the
film’s
director, Jehane Noujaim, and producers Rosadel Varela
and Hani Salama. They were joined by Jay Rosen
of NYU’s journalism department and Khaled Fahmy
of Middle East/Islamic studies. “Why did
you do it?” asked a member of the audience. “Our
hope is that this film will give people a window into
a different perspective”…”that people
will question the media”…”gain an
independent way of thought,” responded the
three women filmmakers in turn.
In May NEF partnered with the Bard Program on Globalization
and International Affairs, to present noted authority
and commentator Fawaz A. Gerges, who spoke about the
future of Middle East security. He is professor
of international affairs and Middle Eastern studies
at Sarah Lawrence College, and author of the new book, “The
Jihadists.”

In the fall the NEF website www.neareast.org was
redesigned for a sharper look and easier maneuvering
with an ever increasing frequency of new postings—and
steadily gained more daily average visitors over the
following months. The NEF annual report became
an entirely on-line publication for the first time.
With generous funding by Antranig and Varsenne Sarkissian,
a portable NEF exhibition was created, featuring seven
panels about NEF’s history and one on present
projects. It was first used in October in South
Pasadena, CA, at the Armenian National Committee of
American, Western Region event, where NEF received
the organization’s 2004 Freedom Award; again
in February when NEF was among honorees for the Armenian
Genocide commemorative “International Relief,
Refuge and Recognition Tribute” luncheon in Los
Angeles; and in April for the Congressional Armenian
Genocide Observance held on Capitol Hill in Washington,
D.C.
In conjunction with NEF’s 90th anniversary year,
a comprehensive three-part series of articles on our
history, evolution, past and current projects, and
influence was widely featured in the Armenian American
press and excerpted in Arab American magazines such
as “Islamic Horizons.” An NEF anniversary
announcement ran in “Washington Report on Middle
Eastern Affairs,” a widely read magazine with
an Arab American audience of 100,000; also in a prominent
Armenian weekly, “The Armenian Reporter,” in
Armenian Genocide commemorative issues in April.

In both an individual mailing and placement on the web,
NEF promoted planned giving as a way for our supporters
to meet personal financial goals while simultaneously
contributing to NEF. Planned giving to NEF provides
important benefits by allowing our donors to fulfill
philanthropic interests today—making a gift that will
both have a long-term impact and provide opportunities
to reduce personal taxes. Long-time supporter William
Z. Cline, who has NEF in his will, gave his strong, personal
endorsement to NEF’s planned giving program.
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