Renowned Cosmologist Donates Award Prize to African Scholars

Tue, Mar 29, 2016
By publisher
3 MIN READ

BREAKING NEWS, Education

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NEIL Turok, the 2016 winner of the American Institute of Physics’ John Torrence Tate Award for International Leadership in Physics, has announced that he would donate a $10,000 cash prize, the monetary portion of the award, to the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences, AIMS.

The donation will be used to initiate the Thierry Zomahoun Scholarship at the AIMS, which will be awarded upon graduation to an African student currently taking the AIMS Masters at one of the AIMS five centres of excellence. Thierry Zomahoun has served as President and CEO of the AIMS organisation for the past five years.

“I would like this scholarship to encourage students who come from disadvantaged backgrounds, overcome huge obstacles in their personal development, and show outstanding commitment to creating a better future for others,” Turok said. “Thierry was a street kid who gained three Masters degrees and became an incredible manager and development leader. Africa needs more Thierrys!”

“I can think of no better way to pay tribute to this honour, and to John Torrance Tate (who established the world’s top physics journal), than to support an AIMS scholarship in Thierry’s name. I hope this will encourage other donors to follow suit.”

Turok, who is the director of the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics and the founder of the AIMS, is one of the world’s most renowned physicists. The donation is a token of esteem for the outstanding leadership Zomahoun has exhibited during his five years at AIMS, driving the expansion of AIMS from one to five centres, with a sixth to open in Rwanda in August.

Zomahoun is also the founder and chairman of the Next Einstein Forum, NEF, an AIMS initiative. The NEF was held in Dakar, Senegal from March 8 to 10, attracting over 1000 participants including top African scientists, policy makers and private sector leaders. It was the largest scientific gathering ever held in Africa.

“This is a great honour,” said Zomahoun. “I am humbled by this scholarship in my name. We are determined to transform Africa into the next global hub for science. All forms of scientific endeavour and especially those that produce tangible results will be encouraged with the aim being to solve challenges in Africa and around the world.”

Turok’s hope is that the cash prize donation would encourage similar contributions from public, private and non-governmental sources to allow more African youth to benefit from top quality training in mathematical science.

— Mar 29, 2016 @ 14:40 GMT

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