The Scheherazade Foundation is a private, non-profit community interest company (CIC) established in 2020[1] by the writer and film-maker Tahir Shah and his daughter, Ariane Shah,[6] to support culturaleducation and intercultural bridge-building. It is based in London, England.[4][5] The company's registration number in the UK is 13038593.[4][5]
The three main aims of The Scheherazade Foundation are:[4][6]
To seek to empower women – and in particular young women – who will step out into the world, becoming leaders and role models for future generations.
To bridge cultures by striving towards shared values and know-how.
To harness the teaching power of stories that has been a bedrock of the human experience since the dawn of civilization.
Headquarters in Casablanca
In 2022, work began on renovating a one-acre, walled property, Dar Khalifa (The Caliph's House), in the Ain Diab district of Casablanca, to turn it into the headquarters of The Scheherazade Foundation.[6][7] The property consists of a mansion with thirty rooms, built around an interior garden or riad.[6][7]
According to Jason Webster in the Financial Times, Tahir Shah, who has previously written about his time in The Caliph's House, "hired artisans and craftsmen from across Morocco to work on fabulous zellij fountains, stucco screens with geometric Islamic designs, and intricately carved wooden Berber doorways."[7]
Activities
Repatriation of Ethiopian artefacts
In July 2021, The Scheherazade Foundation launched a crowdfunding appeal[8] so that they could repatriate Ethiopian artefacts looted by British troops from Ethiopia in East Africa in 1868, following the Battle of Magdala.[9] The crowdfunding enabled the foundation to purchase several items, including an imperial shield, handwritten Ethiopian religious texts, crosses, and a set of beakers, from a UK auction house and private dealers in Europe.[9][10]
In a report in the Smithsonian Magazine, Dr. Alula Pankhurst, a member of Ethiopia's National Heritage Restitution Committee expressed hope that The Scheherazade Foundation's efforts would lead to further restitution initiatives, "especially at a time when retaining artefacts, notably human remains such as those of Prince Alemayehu in Windsor Chapel or sacred objects such as the holy Tabot Arks of the Covenant in the British Museum is becoming increasingly anachronistic, irrelevant and embarrassing."[12]
The Scheherazade Foundation aims to repatriate more Ethiopian artefacts, and a reporter for Returning Heritage expressed the opinion that there is also a strong case "for returning the eleven sacred tabots, concealed within the vaults of the British Museum."[14][15]
2021 letter of appeal
Several attempts have been made in the past to get the British Museum to repatriate artefacts in its possession, but the museum had argued that it "is forbidden by the British Museum Act of 1963 to restitute objects in its collection".[16] However, a new legal opinion commission by the Scheherazade Foundation and drawn up by Samantha Knights QC points out that the 1963 Act "has a provision that allows disposal of objects 'unfit to be retained'[15][16] and that can be disposed 'without detriment to the interests of students'", and that since the artefacts have been kept in the museum's vaults for the past 150 years, without allowing their study, copying or photography, the artefacts are of "no apparent use or relevance to the museum" and would therefore "fall within this category."[16]
On the basis of this new legal opinion, a letter was drawn up by the Scheherazade Foundation and sent to the trustees of the British Museum asking for the return of the eleven wood and stone tabots held there.[15][16] Signatories to the appeal include seven members of the House of Lords including former deputy chief whipDon Foster, Baron Foster of Bath;[15] actor and broadcaster Stephen Fry; actor Rupert Everett; author and broadcaster Lemn Sissay; former British Ambassador to Ethiopia Sir Harold Walker, and retired Archbishop of CanterburyGeorge Carey.[15][16] In a statement about the appeal, the museum said that "These documents need to be reviewed and addressed with full consideration, and more time is required before this can be looked at by trustees."[16]
Further developments
In November 2021, Reuters confirmed that the artefacts acquired by The Scheherazade Foundation had been successfully returned to Ethiopia, and Ethiopia's tourism minister, Nasise Challa reported that, in addition, "we have started negotiations with the British Museum to bring back 12 tabots".[17]
Storytelling and teaching stories
Tahir Shah comes from a family tradition of writers and storytellers, and he has studied traditional "teaching stories" for many years.[6] These stories contain layers of deeper meaning, and Shah likens them to eating a fruit: "a pleasant experience that also contains a form of nutrition."[6] One of the Scheherazade Foundation's main aims is to publish and disseminate these traditional tales, and also to host a storytelling festival at their headquarters, Dar Khalifa.[6]
Scheherazade Foundation Publishing
The Scheherazade Foundation is in the process of publishing a number of books on stories and storytelling:
* The Secrets of Scheherazade, Scheherazade Foundation Publishing, 2022, ISBN978-1-915311-01-6
Tale of a Lantern and Other Stories, Scheherazade Foundation Publishing, 2022, ISBN978-1-915311-03-0
The Elephant and The Tortoise and Other Stories, Scheherazade Foundation Publishing, 2022, ISBN978-1-915311-04-7
The Monkey’s Fiddle and Other Stories, Scheherazade Foundation Publishing, 2022, ISBN978-1-915311-05-4
Ghost of the Violet Well and Other Stories, Scheherazade Foundation Publishing, 2022, ISBN978-1-915311-06-1
Many Wise Fools and Other Stories, Scheherazade Foundation Publishing, 2022, ISBN978-1-915311-07-8
The Frog Prince and Other Stories, Scheherazade Foundation Publishing, 2022, ISBN978-1-915311-08-5
The Three Lemons and Other Stories, Scheherazade Foundation Publishing, 2022, ISBN978-1-915311-09-2
The Twelve-Headed Griffin and Other Stories, Scheherazade Foundation Publishing, 2022, ISBN978-1-915311-10-8
The Antelope Boy and Other Stories, Scheherazade Foundation Publishing, 2022, ISBN978-1-915311-11-5
The Treasure of A Thousand and One Nights, Scheherazade Foundation Publishing, 2022, ISBN978-1-915311-13-9
On Stories and Storytelling, Scheherazade Foundation Publishing, 2022, ISBN978-1-915311-14-6