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Tuesday, November 5, 2024

University of Arizona president: 'the study of languages and cultures is vital'

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The University of Arizona is poised to receive a $2.5 million charitable grant from the Roshan Cultural Heritage Institute that is aimed at advancing scholarship in Persian and Iranian studies. | news.arizona.edu

The University of Arizona is poised to receive a $2.5 million charitable grant from the Roshan Cultural Heritage Institute that is aimed at advancing scholarship in Persian and Iranian studies. | news.arizona.edu

The University of Arizona is poised to receive a $2.5 million charitable grant from the Roshan Cultural Heritage Institute that is aimed at advancing scholarship in Persian and Iranian studies and supporting an endowed professorship and graduate student fellowships.

According to the school’s website, at least part of the grant that comes courtesy of the Roshan Cultural Heritage Institute Fund, a donor-advised reservoir of the Silicon Valley Community Foundation, will establish the Elahé Omidyar Mir-Djalali Professorship in Iranian Linguistics, which will initially be held by linguistics professor Simin Karimi.

The remaining $1 million will fund the Elahé Omidyar Mir-Djalali Graduate Fellowships in Persian and Iranian Studies. Both the professorship and fellowships are endowed and will permanently support faculty and graduate students in these areas.

"The study of languages and cultures is vital to understanding the rich diversity of an increasingly globalized world," said University President Robert C. Robbins. "I am incredibly grateful that Roshan Cultural Heritage Institute has once again invested in the University of Arizona, helping us to build a world-class program in Persian and Iranian studies, advance critical research, and train the next generation of scholars."

Iranian-born Roshan Cultural Heritage Institute founder and renowned linguist and expert in language and Persian studies Mir-Djalali is a renowned linguist and expert in language education, cross-cultural communication and Persian studies. Mir-Djalali received a doctorate in linguistics from Paris-Sorbonne University.

"We are delighted to once again partner with the University of Arizona and strengthen our support through the establishment of this new endowed professorship in linguistics and for graduate student fellowships," Mir-Djalali said. "This endowment will foster and fortify the graduate study of Persian and Iranian languages and linguistics and would place the university's Roshan Graduate Interdisciplinary Program as one of the largest and most prominent Persian programs in the U.S. I personally am proud to have witnessed all the great work this university has contributed over the years to promote and preserve Persian language and culture and look forward to the impact it will have on future generations of faculty and students for years to come."

Now completing his 12-year term as Don Bennett Moon Dean of the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, John Paul Jones III has seen the benefits of the program up close and personal.

"During my time as dean, I have witnessed how grants from Roshan Cultural Heritage Institute have elevated the stature and impact of the university's strong Persian and Iranian studies program," he said. "By supporting both faculty and students, this transformative new grant places the University of Arizona in the top tier of universities in Persian and Iranian studies. I am deeply grateful to Roshan Cultural Heritage Institute and Dr. Elahé Omidyar Mir-Djalali for their vision and generosity."

University of Arizona Foundation President and CEO John-Paul Roczniak also approves.

"Support from organizations like Roshan Cultural Heritage Institute are vital to the university's research enterprise," Roczniak said. "Roshan Cultural Heritage Institute has steadily invested in the University of Arizona program for 20 years, establishing endowments that enabled it to grow in stature and will sustain it for decades to come."

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