Cameron Grants Royal Museum Role to Muslim

Dr-Aminul-Hoque-Royal-Musem

Cameron Grants Royal Museum Role to Muslim

The Department for Culture, Media and Sport of the United Kingdom government announced that Goldsmiths, University of London lecturer Dr Aminul Hoque, a Bangladeshi Muslim, has been appointed as a Trustee for Royal Museums Greenwich. Dr Hoque’s position is voluntary and runs for four years.

A Muslim lecturer was granted a role in the Royal Museums by outgoing British Prime Minister David Cameron, in recognition of his studies on what it means to be a Bangladeshi Muslim growing up in London’s East End.

“I am aware of the precious role that museums play in society,” Goldsmith’s University lecturer Dr Aminul Hoque told East London Advertiser on Thursday, July 14.

“They are protectors and custodians of our history, art, science, knowledge and human stories.”

Dr Hoque’s position is voluntary and runs for four years, from September 2016 – 2020. Trustees are involved with the museums’ leadership and management, fundraising, and working with the government, especially the Department for Culture, Media and Sport.

Royal Museums Greenwich is the collective name for four popular attractions just a short journey from the Goldsmiths campus – the National Maritime Museum, Queen’s House art gallery, the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, and the Cutty Sark. The museums are a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, London, is the leading maritime museum of the United Kingdom and may be the largest museum of its kind in the world.

Also a Visiting Lecturer at London Metropolitan’s Whitechapel campus, Dr Haque gained his doctorate from Goldsmith’s in 2011 with his research for his book British Islamic Identity—Third Generation Bangladeshis from East London which was published last year. It shows how Muslim teenagers he interviewed created their own “British-Islamic identity”.

The National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, London, is the leading maritime museum of the United Kingdom and may be the largest museum of its kind in the world.

He studied how that identity helps Bengalis born in the East End manage being British, Bangladeshi and Muslim with a sense of belonging.

Dr Haque has years’ experience in the youth and voluntary sector involved with teachers, parents and social workers. He has been a trainer since 2004 for Tower Hamlets Council’s Working with Bangladeshi Families course. Awarded an MBE in 2008 for services to youth justice in east London, he developed an A-Z manual to work with disengaged and ‘hard to reach’ youths as part of a council project at Tower Hamlets College.

Source: aboutislam.net

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