Philosophy in Islam?
Souleymane Bachir Diagne is a professor at Columbia University in the departments French and Philosophy. He is also director of the Institute of African Studies. His areas of research include History of Philosophy, History of Logic and Mathematics, Islamic Philosophy, and African Philosophy and Literature. His latest publications include: The Ink of the Scholars. Reflections on Philosophy in Africa (Codesria, 2016) and Open to Reason. Muslim philosophers in conversation with Western tradition (Columbia University Press, 2018)
Sukina Douglas, together with Muneera Rashida, is part of the British spoken word duo Poetic Pilgrimage and hip hop collective Nana. She tours worldwide and has led poetry workshops in countries including the United Kingdom, the United States, South Africa, Sweden, Morocco and Belgium. Her goal is to inspire people through the power of words. She is an associate artist of KVS and is currently writing her first theater play entitled Afropean//Human Being, which will premiere in KVS in February 2020. A first public try-out of this work in progress is organized on June 14-15, 2019.
Ted Bwatu is a financial consultant. He is interested in the North-South problem and the socio-economic impact of increasing inequality. He is currently writing his first novel, an allegorical epic with a view of contemporary society from the perspective of African and Eastern philosophies.
Mohamed Barrie and Aminata Ndow are two students from Antwerp. In 2017 they founded the student association AYO, together with Emmanuel Iyamu. With AYO they want to increase the self-awareness of Afro-Belgian students, among other things. Last year they organised the very first edition of Black History Month in Belgium, and they hope that this year again, March will be marked by Black History Month, and that this will further strengthen the voice of the African diaspora in Belgium.