This week, Calgary elected a new mayor. His name is Naheed Nenshi. I met him almost a decade ago when he was a participant in a forum on building the creative economy I helped catalyze with CEOs for Cities, Carol Coletta. Here’s one of his first interviews since being elected.
Here’s his recent TEDxCalgary talk:
Nenshi, 38, is a professor at Mount Royal University. He graduated from the University of Calgary, where he was president of the students’ union, and holds a master’s in public policy from the Harvard Kennedy School.
He is the first Muslim to be elected mayor of a large North American city. His parents immigrated to Canada from Tanzania. Here’s how one account in the Canadian press summarized it:
[W]hile much was being made of Nenshi being what’s believed to be the first Muslim mayor in a major Canadian city, experts, supporters and even leaders in Calgary’s Muslim community were downplaying the role Nenshi’s faith played in his election.
“I think it’s an overblown situation,” said Calgary Imam Syed Soharwardy, the founder of the Islamic Supreme Council of Canada.
“He’s a Muslim. Yes, well so what? Why does it have to be identified that we have a Muslim mayor? I think the most important thing is we have a new person who has been elected by Calgarians.”
Still, Soharwardy couldn’t deny the impact Nenshi’s election will have on Calgary’s cowboy conservative stereotype. “This sends a very strong message to our country. Calgary is the first major city in North America who has a visible minority mayor, an immigrant son,” he said. “I think it shows we are not a redneck city. It shows that we are not biased, that we are not just Christian, we are multifaith and everyone has an equal opportunity.”
The issue of religion did not really enter into the campaign debate which pitted Nenshi, a 38-year-old business professor who harnessed the power of social networking, against the perceived front runners — established alderman Ric McIver and former TV news anchor Barb Higgins.
When asked to confirm that Nenshi was Muslim, one of his supporters replied, “Barely,” at his victory party on Monday night.
Here’s a campaign video:


October 23rd, 2010 at 3:40 pm
… amazing, this reminds me of the days in Vancouver back in ‘82. I attended a school exchange and in the class were virtually no native Canadians – most peers were first generation immigrants.
Diversity is what really counts, and Canada is certainly a very special case (despite the native Canadian tribes are not treated in the same way as foreigners – however this doesn’t have to stick in the future).
Best regards from Dresden,
Ralf
PS.: Dresden has been the buzzing capital of Saxony under the rule of August the Strong back in the day. He invited foreigners from all over Europe to built up what was once known as the cultural and industrial heart of Germany: Saxony. It’s probably time to make that happen again.
PPS: I have connected to http://bit.ly/9d37mz, which has captured the outcome of a first workshop for bringing the creative potential in the city of Dresden into a florishing position in order to generate economic prosperity across boundaries (flowing conversations horizontally across arts, culture, business, politics, institutions, education and beyond the city limits connecting with other hot spots around the world.
PPPS: … connecting further the blog of JeanPolMartin, http://twitter.com/jeanpol, http://bit.ly/aRvmix (just recently, he started to write about creative class in cities)