Turquoise Mountain Foundation
[1] The organization subsequently expanded its work to Jordan,[2] Saudi Arabia,[3] and Myanmar (Burma).[4] Turquoise Mountain was founded in 2006 by King Charles III (then the Prince of Wales) in partnership with President of Afghanistan Hamid Karzai,[5] and British writer, academic and former politician Rory Stewart, a former Conservative member of Parliament.[8][9] The group describes its mission as "to preserve and regenerate historic areas and communities with a rich cultural heritage and to revive traditional crafts, to create jobs, skills and a renewed sense of pride."[10] Funding has been provided by a number of public and private donors from both the West and Middle East,[8] including the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), the Government of Afghanistan, the Government of India, the Blue Moon Fund, Reach Out To Asia, the Kathy Evans Afghan Education Trust, The Bonita Trust, The Prince's Charities, The Kingdom of Bahrain, the Amir of Kuwait, the Alwaleed Bin Talal Foundation (Saudi Arabia) and the British Council.[11] The infamous scene in British film-maker Adam Curtis's 2015 documentary Bitter Lake (film) of an English art teacher enthusiastically extolling the meaning of Marcel Duchamp’s conceptual artwork, Fountain (Duchamp), an inverted male urinal, to a group of recently liberated and incredulous Afghan women, is held to have occurred under the auspices of the Turquoise Mountain Foundation.