Niagara Foundation

Last updated
Niagara Foundation
Formation2004
TypeNonprofit
PurposeFostering civic conversations and sustained relationships between people of different cultures and faiths
HeadquartersChicago
Region
Midwest
Leader Fethullah Gulen
Parent organization
Alliance for Shared Values

The Niagara Foundation is a nonprofit organization, [1] founded in 2004, [2] dedicated to the mission of fostering civic conversations and sustained relationships between people of different cultures and faiths, and part of the Alliance for Shared Values. [3] [4] [5]

Contents

Niagara has branches across the Midwest including Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Nebraska, Ohio, Minnesota, Missouri, Wisconsin, and Iowa, but is headquartered in Chicago. [6] On October 3, 2013, the Niagara Foundation branch in Des Moines, Iowa held a Turkish American business development forum. [7]

The Niagara Foundation is associated with the Gülen movement and its honorary president is Fethullah Gulen. Which lead to Turkey freezing Niagara Foundation's assets in December 2021. [8] [9] [10] [11]

Key people

The former President of the Niagara Foundation, Şerif Soydan, and its Vice President Hilmi Çınar were present for the signing of the "sister airport" agreement between Chicago's airports and the Istanbul Atatürk Airport in Turkey. [12] Çınar was also a member of the 2012 Chicago NATO Host Committee [13] and he also spoke at an Elgin Chamber of Commerce (Elgin, Illinois) development meeting about trade with Turkey. [14] Soydan is on the board of advisors to the Catholic Theological Union in Chicago [15] and Robert Morris University in Moon Township, Pennsylvania. [16] These academic relationships are also fostered by Niagara's internship program, which has hosted international students from universities around Chicago. [17] [18] [19]

Activities

Niagara carries out its mission through programs and events in three centers:

Peace and Dialogue Awards

Niagara Foundation grants the "Dialog and Peace Award" each year to individuals or organizations that "have demonstrated strong commitment to serving their community while maintaining a global mindset." The awards were founded in 2006 [31] and have honored the Chicago Tribune, [32] Mark Owen Webb (professor of philosophy at Texas Tech University), Henry Bienen (President Emeritus, Northwestern University), [33] Bishop Demetrios of Mokissos, [34] and US Secretary of Education (previously CEO, Chicago Public Schools) Arne Duncan. [35]

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