WASHINGTON, May 5 /U.S. Newswire/ -- The President announced today his
intent to appoint Laila Al-Marayati, Firuz Kazemzadeh and Charles Z. Smith
as members of the United States Commission on International Religious
Freedom.
Dr. Laila Al-Marayati, of Los Angeles, California, is a founding member
and past president of the Muslim Women's League, a Los Angeles based non-
profit organization focusing on the dissemination of accurate information
about Islam and Muslims, particularly regarding women. She has written
extensively and participated in numerous conferences and interfaith
dialogues speaking on a variety of issues related to Muslim women. Under
her direction, the Muslim Women's League founded the Women's Coalition
against Ethnic Cleansing, comprised of over 20 women's religious and civic
groups. Dr. Al-Marayati has also served as a member of the U.S. State
Department's Advisory Committee on Religious Freedom Abroad, and, in
September 1995, was a member of the U.S. Delegation, chaired by First
Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, to the Fourth World Conference on Women,
sponsored by the United Nations, held in Beijing, China. Dr. Al-Marayati
is a Board certified obstetrician-gynecologist in private practice in
Glendale California, and is Clinical Associate Professor in the Department
of Obstetrics and Gynecology at Los Angeles County/USC Women's and
Children's Hospital.
Dr. Firuz Kazemzadeh, of Alta Loma, California, is Secretary for External
Affairs of the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha'is of the United
States. As the American Baha'i community's principal spokesman on external
affairs issues, Dr. Kazemzadeh has testified frequently before the House
International Relations and Senate Foreign Relations Committees on the
religious repression of Baha'i abroad. He is Professor Emeritus of History
at Yale University, having taught Russian history there from 1956 until his
retirement in 1992. During his tenure at Yale, Dr. Kazemzadeh also served
variously as Director of Graduate Studies in Russian and Eastern European
Studies; Chair of the Council on Russian and East European Studies; Chair
of the Committee on Middle Eastern Studies; Director of Graduate Studies
in History; and Master of Davenport College. He is the author of The
Struggle for Transcaucasia, 1917-1921 and Russia and Britain in Persia,
1864-1914,as well as the co-author of several other books relating to
Russia and Central Asia. Since 1966 he has served as editor of World Order
magazine. Dr. Kazemzadeh was born in the Iranian Embassy in Moscow, where
his father served for many years, came to the United States in 1944, and
received his academic training at Stanford and Harvard.
The Honorable Charles Z. Smith, of Seattle, Washington, is a Justice of
the Washington State Supreme Court. He was originally appointed in July,
1988, to fill an unexpired term, and was elected, unopposed, in 1988 and
1990, and most recently in 1996 to another term of six years. Justice Smith
served from 1965 to 1995 on the General Board of the American Baptist
Churches, USA, and was President, American Baptist Churches from 1975
to 1977, and Immediate Past President from 1977 to 1979. He has served in
several local, national, and international organizations concerned with
religious freedom and human rights, including active participation with
the National Interreligious Task Force on Soviet Jewry in monitoring
compliance with the Helsinki Accords during the period 1977 to 1985.
Justice Smith taught at the University of Washington School of Law from
1973 to 1983 and is now Professor of Law Emeritus. He has also served
on the boards of numerous civic, charitable, cultural educational and
health related organizations in Seattle and Washington State, and a
number of professional organizations and councils. Justice Smith is a
member of the National Bar Association and the Hispanic National Bar
Association. He received his B.S. from Temple University and a J.D. from
the University of Washington School of Law. He also retired from the
U.S. Marine Corps Reserve with the rank of a Lieutenant Colonel.
The nine-member U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom
was established upon the strong bipartisan passage of the International
Religious Freedom Act of 1998, which the President signed into law on
October 27, 1998. The Commission, which is advisory in nature, will
issue an Annual Report providing recommendations for U.S. policy
responses to international religious freedom violations. Robert Seiple,
Ambassador at Large for International Religious Freedom, acts as an ex-
officio member of the Commission.
The promotion of religious freedom abroad is a priority of the Clinton
presidency. These three distinguished appointees will further ensure that
international religious freedom continues to be an integral part of the
Administration's foreign policy.
©Copyright 1999, U.S. Newswire
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