Injaz soraya salti biography
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It is remarkable to reflect on how this organization has developed throughout the years, and I cannot overstate my enthusiasm in being the chairwoman for an organization that has made such an outstanding impact. INJAZ started with just one local office and now operates in 13 countries. We’ve grown from a few hundred volunteers to 84 thousands, a few schools and partnerships to 27 thousand schools, 1,800 universities, and 13 ministries of education expanding to become the largest non-profit organization dedicated to overcoming unemployment in the region. We serve as a shining example of success in our mission and continue to expand, hoping to reach an annual student outreach of one million by the year 2020. With every year that passes by, this organization continues to show an upward trend in its successes.
With our goals set for the years to come and with a steadfast passion and focused commitment , it is important for me to point out that none of this would be possible withou
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Soraya Salti
Jordanian and American
Soraya Salti (c.1971–2015) was a Jordanian national and an American citizen social entrepreneur and educational innovator, who served as the Senior Vice President of Middle East/North Africa for Junior Achievement Worldwide, and founded its regional office,INJAZ Al-Arab.
Life
[edit]Soraya Salti held a Bachelors in Economics and Accounting and an MBA from Northwestern University. She worked to apply Michael Porter's model of economic development to Jordan before joining INJAZ, where she helped INJAZ utöka into 13 Arab countries, reaching over 100,000 ung people.[1]
In 2006 she won the Schwab Social Entrepreneur of the Year for Jordan.[1] Soraya was also a ung Global Leader of the World Economic Forum.
Family
[edit]Soraya is the daughter of Amer and Rebecca Salti. Rebecca became famous for her outreach work in Jordan in 1985 when as a director for Save the Children in Jordan she launched the Bani Hamida Weav
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Mysterious deaths of prominent sisters shock Jordan
Mystery surrounds the deaths of two prominent and successful Jordanian sisters after their bodies were found together at the base of a building under construction in Amman.
The deaths of Soraya Salti, 44, a mother of one, and Jumana, 37, have shocked and baffled Jordanians and led to an outpouring of grief from friends and colleagues.
Soraya spearheaded Injaz Al Arab, an education initiative that promoted entrepreneurship across the Arab world. Jumana was a director at PricewaterhouseCoopers based in the UAE since 2008.
Police suggested yesterday that the sisters committed suicide by jumping from the building in Jwiedeh, a rundown area of the Jordanian capital on Friday. Detectives found a handwritten note from one of the women addressed to her parents.
But friends and relatives rejected this, prompting speculation that the two women were murdered.
The sisters had played golf on Friday at the Bisharat Golf Club in a suburb of