Six charitable celebrities fighting for humanitarian causes

This handout picture released by the UNHCR, shows Special Envoy Angelina Jolie meeting Falak, 8, during a visit to West Mosul, on June 16, 2018. (AFP)
Updated 18 June 2018
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Six charitable celebrities fighting for humanitarian causes

DUBAI: On Sunday, Hollywood heavyweight Angelina Jolie visited Iraq in the latest of a long line of humanitarian missions, but she isn’t the only celebrity with a cause.

Angelina Jolie

The Hollywood star this week called for a larger focus on conflict prevention rather than responding to its repercussions, during a visit to Iraq’s Domiz refugee camp with the UN refugee agency.
The visit marked Jolie’s 61st mission — and fifth to Iraq — with the UN refugee agency since 2001.

"I met parents whose 17-year-old daughter lost her legs in a mortar-strike. When they carried her to get medical treatment they were turned away, and she bled to death. It is deeply upsetting that people who have endured unparalleled brutality have so little as they try, somehow, to rebuild the lives they once had.” . UNHCR Special Envoy Angelina Jolie met Mohamed and his family in West Mosul's Old City, Iraq, on June 16, 2018. . During the offensive to retake the city from ISIS, Mohamed’s house was hit by an airstrike killing his 17 year-old daughter and destroying most of the home. Together with his three surviving children and his wife, Mohamed fled to the home of a family friend, where they have been living ever since. However the host family can no longer support them and Mohamed may have to bring his family back to live in the ruins of their home. . The visit marked Angelina Jolie’s 61st mission – and her fifth visit to Iraq – with the UN Refugee Agency since 2001. She arrived in the city on the second day of Eid al-Fitr, the Muslim holiday marking the end of Ramadan. . Read her full statement and see more on Angelina Jolie's visit today on our Facebook page (Facebook.com/UNHCR) . Photo Credit - UNHCR / @andrewmcconnellphoto . #Mosul #Iraq #AngelinaJolie #UNHCR #eid #refugees #withrefugees #hope #eidalfitr #ramadan

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Amber Heard

In April, the actress said that a meeting with Syrian refugees and foreign medical volunteers left an “an indelible mark” on her soul.
Heard, 31, spent a week in Jordan as part of a delegation of the Syrian American Medical Society, visiting the kingdom’s largest camp for Syrian refugees and rehabilitation centers for those wounded in Syria’s seven-year-old civil war.

Shakira

She is a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and supports foundations dedicated to development advocacy in Colombia and Latin America. She founded the Pies Descalzos Foundation when she was 18-years-old. The organization has six open-door schools providing access to education for underprivileged children in Colombia.

Priyanka Chopra

The UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador served as a National Goodwill Ambassador to India for ten years and founded a charity in the country — The Priyanka Chopra Foundation for Health and Education — to promote the education of girls and children in India.

I’m in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh today for a field visit with UNICEF, to one of the largest refugee camps in the world. In the second half of 2017, the world saw horrific images of ethnic cleansing from the Rakhine State of Myanmar(Burma). This violence drove nearly 700,000 Rohingya across the border into Bangladesh - 60% are children! Many months later they are still highly vulnerable, living in overcrowded camps with no idea when or where they will ever belong...even worse, when they will get their next meal. AND...as they finally start to settle and feel a sense of safety, monsoon season looms...threatening to destroy all that they’ve built so far. This is an entire generation of children that have no future in sight. Through their smiles I could see the vacancy in their eyes. These children are at the forefront of this humanitarian crisis, and they desperately need our help. The world needs to care. We need to care. These kids are our future. Pls Lend your support at www.supportunicef.org #ChildrenUprooted @unicef @unicefbangladesh Credit: @briansokol @hhhtravels

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Katy Perry

In 2013, Katy was appointed a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador and has traveled the world, from Vietnam to Madagascar, to raise awareness about the world’s most vulnerable children. In 2016, she received UNICEF’s Audrey Hepburn Humanitarian Award in recognition of her work with underprivileged children.

George Clooney

The Hollywood star has worked to address the suffering in the Darfur region of Sudan and even founded the Not On Our Watch organization, which raises awareness on the issue. The charity has reportedly raised millions of dollars, with much of the funding going through the World Food Program.


Creators spotlight graphic novels as powerful literacy tools at Dubai literature festival

Updated 22 January 2026
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Creators spotlight graphic novels as powerful literacy tools at Dubai literature festival

DUBAI: Comic creators Jamie Smart, John Patrick Green and Mo Abedin joined the Emirates Airline Festival of Literature in Dubai this week to discuss the growing role of comics in classrooms and how graphic novels are reshaping children’s relationship with reading.

Smart is the author of the bestselling “Bunny vs. Monkey” series, Green is known for his popular “The InvestiGators” books about crime-solving alligators, and Abedin is the UAE-based creator of the sci-fi graphic novel “Solarblader."

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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A key point shared by all three speakers was that comics should be valued as a complete art form rather than a stepping stone to prose. Abedin described comics as “a very high art form,” explaining that the medium taught readers how to process complex ideas such as emotion, empathy and culture through visual storytelling. 

He added that comics allowed readers to slow down and engage on their own terms because “the reader is also able to control the pace of the narrative.”

For Smart, the power of comics lies in the emotional connection they create. He spoke about how the word “comics” immediately takes him back to childhood, recalling being “eight years old and going down the newsagent” and spending hours reading. That sense of joy, he said, is what many reluctant readers respond to. He noted that parents often tell him, “My child would not read a book, a single book … until they picked up a comic,” adding that comics inform readers even when they are simply entertaining. “They can just be an emotional, heartfelt story,” he said.

Green focused on how comics function as a visual language that readers learn over time. He described them as “almost a separate language,” noting that some adults struggle at first because they are unsure how to read a page — whether to follow images or text. But that flexibility is what gives comics their strength, allowing readers to choose how they experience a story and giving them more agency than prose or film.

The panel also discussed re-reading as a powerful part of the comics experience. Children often race through a book for the plot, then return to notice visual details, background jokes and character expressions, building deeper comprehension with each reading.

By the end of the session, all three agreed that comics should be studied and respected as their own form of literature — one that welcomes readers of all levels, builds confidence and makes reading feel like discovery rather than obligation.