Hawzah News Agency - Sponsored by Al-Mustafa Foundation of Utah, the festival will be held Saturday from 1 to 5 p.m. at the Holladay City Hall, 4580 S. 2300 East.
Spokeswoman Suryani Omar said the festival aims to bring Muslim and non-Muslim youths together to explore contributions by the religious minority and Islamic peoples of the past and present
in myriad fields.
One display features Zaha Hadid, a world-renowned architect from Iraq who died last year in Miami. She is credited with nearly 40 projects, among them the famed London Aquatic Center,
Beijing’s Galaxy SOHO building, the Board Art Museum in East Lansing, Mich., and the Vienna University Library and Learning Center.
"Muslims have, and will continue to contribute to various fields, and this is an opportunity to highlight some of these contributions,” Omar said.
Another of several Muslim luminaries being honored include 11th-century inventor Ismail Al-Jazari, whose mechanical and hydraulics devices were precursors to both the steam and internal
combustion engines; Al Hasan Ibn Al-Haytham, a ninth-century Iranian physicist, astronomer and mathematician credited with discoveries leading to photography; and Abbas Ibn Firnas, born A.D.
810 in Spain, who made the first successful attempt at human flight.
Organizers hope for at least 200 attendees.