Public Release by University of Toronto
TORONTO, ON - University of Toronto political
philosopher Ramin Jahanbegloo is the recipient of the 2009 Peace Prize awarded
by the Association for the United Nations in Spain. The award recognizes
Jahanbegloo's extensive intellectual work advancing non-violence both as a
philosophy and a political strategy, supporting the ideal of universal freedom
of thought, and the promotion of dialogue and building bridges between different
cultures.

University of Toronto political philosopher Ramin Jahanbegloo is the
recipient of the 2009 Peace Prize awarded by the Association for the
United Nations in Spain. The award recognizes Jahanbegloo's... (more
information) |
"I feel like it means I'm on the right path after
fighting, struggling, and teaching non-violence for nearly 30 years since my
first efforts as a human rights activist as a student in France," says
Jahanbegloo, an associate professor in the Department of Political Science, a
research fellow at the Centre for Ethics, and a scholar-at-risk at Massey
College.
A dual citizen of Canada and Iran, Jahanbegloo is
a leading member of the Iranian intellectual movement and one of the first of
that country's thinkers to have spoken of the philosophical sources of
nonviolence based on the ideals of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King. He has
contributed significantly to the understanding of western philosophy in Iran,
most notably with a program of intellectual exchange and intercultural dialogue
at the country's Cultural Research Bureau that brought a series of leading
Indian, European and North American intellectuals to lecture there.
A member of the board of directors of PEN Canada,
Jahanbegloo is the author and editor of more than 20 books in English, French
and Persian, with his most recent works including The Clash of Intolerances
(2007), Talking India: Conversations with Ashis Nandy (2006), Iran: Between
Tradition and Modernity (2004), and Gandhi: Aux sources de la non-violence:
Thoreau, Ruskin, Tolstoi (1998). He regularly addresses both scholarly and
public audiences through his lectures and essays on tolerance and difference,
democracy and modernity, and the dynamics of Iranian intellectual life.
First appointed in the political science
department from 1997-2001, Jahanbegloo returned to U of T in 2008. In between,
he held a fellowship at the National Endowment for Democracy in Washington, D.C.
in 2001, and appointments as head of the Department of Contemporary Thought at
Iran's Cultural Research Bureau from 2001 to 2006, and as the Rajni Kothari
Professor of Democracy at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies in
India from 2006 to 2007. In April 2006, he was detained by Iranian authorities
on his way to an international conference and was held in the country's
notorious Evin Prison for four months without formal charges. After significant
efforts on his behalf by human rights advocates both inside and outside Iran as
well as hundreds of prominent international figures, Jahanbegloo was released at
the end of August 2006.
"Ramin Jahanbegloo is an exemplar of so much that
Canada aspires to be," says U of T political science professor Melissa Williams,
director of the Centre for Ethics. "He's a real inspiration - his presence here
is a tremendous asset both for our intellectual community and our capacity to
build bridges to the world beyond academe. This award is a well-deserved
recognition of his career built around the concept of dialogue across
ideological, religious and cultural divides."
###
The Association for the United Nations in Spain (ANUE)
is one of over 100 members of the World Federation of United Nations
Associations. Since 1980, the ANUE has awarded the Peace Prize annually to an
individual with an exceptional record of promoting human rights and the
advancement of the objectives of the United Nations. Past recipients include
former South African president Nelson Mandela, former Soviet Union president
Mikhail Gorbachev, former prime minister of Sweden Olof Palme, and South African
singer and civil rights activist Miriam Makeba. Jahanbegloo will be presented
with the award early in 2010, concurrently with the Spanish release of his new
book La solidaridad de las diferencias, published by Arcadia
MEDIA CONTACTS:
Sean Bettam
Communications
Faculty of Arts & Science
University of Toronto
416-946-7950
s.bettam@utoronto.ca
Ramin Jahanbegloo
Department of Political Science
University of Toronto
416-978-6362
ramin.jahanbegloo@utoronto.ca
... Payvand News - 11/09/09 ... --