Before his current role, Nusseibeh served as Minister of State in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (2017-2021),[4][5] where he contributed to the establishment and management of the Office of Public and Cultural Diplomacy, as a coordinating body committed to international cooperation through cross-cultural dialogue and exchange through the promotion of UAE arts and culture abroad.[6][7] He previously served as Assistant Minister in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Cultural Advisor at the UAE Presidential Court, later Ministry of Presidential Affairs.[8]
Many of Nusseibeh's family were displaced during the conflict that led to the establishment of the state of Israel in 1948.[13] His mother, Nuzha Al Ghoussein, left with her family from Ramleh in 1948 and her brother, Talat Al Ghoussein, subsequently became Kuwait's Ambassador to Washington in 1970. Nusseibeh's father, Anwar Nusseibeh who had lost a leg during the 1948 war, became active in Jordanian politics, and held several cabinet posts in the Jordanian government, including Defense, Interior and Education in the 1950s, and stood for Parliament as well as serving in the Senate.[13][14]
As a young student in England, Nusseibeh was involved in Palestinian politics, forming an Arab Society at the University of Cambridge which held debates and invited speakers on topical issues in contemporary Arab politics.[12]
Nusseibeh graduated from Cambridge at the time of the June 1967 Arab-Israeli war, and a return to Jerusalem was not a feasible option.[15] He instead settled in Abu Dhabi,[4] where he worked as a freelance journalist for a number of British and Arab publications including The Economist, The Financial Times and the BBC Arabic Service.[16] He was soon asked to join the Abu Dhabi government, working briefly with the newly established Civil Service Authority (1968-1969),[3] then moving to Abu Dhabi's Department of Information as Director of Research and Documentation. There he helped in establishing Abu Dhabi's first newspapers in Arabic and English (Al-Ittihad 1969, Abu Dhabi Times 1969).[3][17] He then became Director of Information in the newly formed UAE Federal Ministry of Information (1972-1975).[4][17]
While at the Ministry of Information, he also worked as an English language broadcaster and program producer, and helped plan and develop an information and media strategy for the government. He was also involved in the preparing, editing and translating of all its books and publications.[17][18]
In 1975, Zaki Nusseibeh became the Director of the Press Office in the Diwan (Court) of Sheikh Zayed,[11] subsequently becoming an Adviser while continuing his role as the President's personal interpreter.[5][10]
Art and culture in diplomacy
Zaki Nusseibeh has served on several public and private bodies dealing with the development of cultural and educational strategies in the UAE.[5] He was Deputy Chairman of the Abu Dhabi Authority for Culture and Heritage (2006-2012) and a member of the Board of the Abu Dhabi Authority for Tourism and Culture (2012-2016), today the Abu Dhabi Department of Culture and Tourism.[17][19] In this capacity, he contributed to the development of some of Abu Dhabi's major cultural and art initiatives, such as the Saadiyat Culture District and its leading museums.[5]
Nusseibeh's publications include translations of Gulf and Arab poetry into several European languages as well as articles in different journals and newspapers.[20][21]
He has recently published a book in Arabic about a tribal leader who was a close companion to Sheikh Zayed, the founder of the United Arab Emirates (Sheikh Zayed Wa Salem Bin Hamm, Rifqat Oumor, Abu Dhabi 2019).[22][23]
Affiliations and chairmanships
Zaki Nusseibeh has served on several public and private bodies dealing with the development of cultural and educational strategies in the UAE.[5]
Nusseibeh was appointed as the chairman of the Board of Trustees of the Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi in 2018,[24][25] having helped to establish the university in 2006.[11]
Nusseibeh was the chairman of the advisory board for the Middle East Centre of the London School of Economics (2015-2018),[30] as well as the President of the Alliance Française in Paris (2013-2017).[3][19]