qsaark
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A Kashmiri Muslim woman has been appointed by the administration of US President Barack Obama as a special representative for Muslim communities, in line with his policy to reach out to Muslims around the world. The appointment was made by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in Washington, reports reaching Srinagar said on Friday, IRNA reported. The appointment follows the June 4 speech in Cairo by President Obama to Muslim world in which he sought “a new beginning“ between the United States and Muslims “based on mutual interest and mutual respect, and...based upon the truth that America and Islam are not exclusive and need not be in competition“.
Farah Pandit would carry out new US administration efforts to “engage with Muslims around the world on a people-to-people and organizational level“, reports quoting officials said. Pandit, who immigrated to the United States with her parents from Srinagar, was quoted as saying that she sees her personal experience as an illustration of how Muslim immigrants to the United States could successfully integrate into American society. She was previously adviser on Muslim engagement at the State Department, serving as a senior adviser to the assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs. Serving on the National Security Council as coordinator for US policy on outreach to the minority community, Pandit worked at the US Agency for International Development on assistance projects for Iraq, Afghanistan and the Palestinian territories. According to Boston Globe, Pandit is a long way from the violence of her native Kashmir, but it is never far from her thoughts. She wrote her thesis on the dispute between India and Pakistan over Kashmir, and in 1994 secured grants to visit her war-ravaged homeland. Pandit who lives in Canton with her mother and brother, has visited Kashmir at least 20 times in an effort to help find a way to end the conflict.
Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, tensions have risen even higher in Kashmir, and Pandit has often been asked to speak at schools about the situation. Although she was raised in Milton and Braintree, Pandit remains closely aligned with Kashmir, a region with 12 million residents sitting between the northern borders of India and Pakistan. Pandit arrived in the United States as a toddler on July 4, 1969. She came with her mother, Mehbooba Anwar (who has retired as medical director of Massachusetts Respiratory Hospital in Braintree), and her brother, Adeel Pandith, 28. Her father arrived in 1970 and Pandit’s parents divorced when she was 10. Pandit attended Milton Academy, where as co-class president she sharpened her leadership skills.