Support The Aladdin Project


« The defence of values of justice and fraternity must overwhelm all obstacles to prevail over intolerance, racism and conflict. »

From the Aladdin Project’s Charter, “A Call to Conscience”


Thanks to your donations, the Aladdin Project can achieve its objectives of promoting intercultural dialogue, providing knowledge in different languages of the Middle East, and countering Holocaust denial and anti-Semitism and all forms of exclusion, xenophobia and racism.

Tax advantage

The Aladdin Project operates under the laws of the French Republic and is registered as a non-profit organization based in Paris. Your contribution is tax-deductible. Please contact us for details if you live outside France. Donors in France automatically receive a tax deduction certificate.

TRANSPARENCY

The Aladdin project is committed to respect strict rules of transparency and rigorous management.
Read our commitments.

Development strategy

• Promote intercultural dialogue
• Share knowledge of History and its lessons in different languages, including those prevalent in the Middle East.
• Mobilize world leaders, civil society actors and international institutions against Holocaust denial, anti-Semitism and all forms of exclusion, xenophobia and racism.

Since its launch in 2009,
the Aladdin Projects has achieved the following:

• Its declaration of principles, “A Call to Conscience”, has been signed by more than 1 500 intellectuals and political leaders from more than 40 countries,
• It has spread knowledge of the Holocaust, Islam, Judaism and Jewish-Muslims relations in French, English, Arabic, Farsi and Turkish to hundreds of thousands of people through its multilingual website
• More than 25,000 of its books have been downloaded from its online library.
• First-ever conferences about the Holocaust have been organized in ten cities in the middle-East and North Africa.
• An unprecedented visit to Auschwitz by an International delegation was organized in February 2011, with 200 political, religious and civil society leaders mostly from the Middle-East and Africa
• Claude Lanzmann’s epic nine-and-a-half-hour documentary Shoah was subtitled in its entirety in Arabic, Persian and Turkish. It was aired for the first time in Iran via a satellite channel on March 7, 2011. Turkish public television, TRT, aired the entire film starting on January 26, 2012.