Jandali is the founder of nonprofit organization
Pianos for Peace, which aspires to use the power of music to enrich communities through an annual outdoor festival and several year-round community outreach programs serving under-resourced local schools and organizations in Atlanta. He is also the founder of the Malek Jandali International Youth Piano Competition, which encourages talented young pianists from around the globe to embrace the music of their homelands and submit applications for the chance to perform at Carnegie Hall in New York City. Jandali frequently contributes to charity events collaborating with international organization's
UNICEF,
MSF,
Save The Children among others, to raise humanitarian aid for children in need around the world. He has visited refugee camps in
Turkey,
Syria,
Croatia and
Malta to raise awareness and humanitarian aid for refugees, and was inspired to launch his ongoing world tour "The Voice of the Free Syrian Children" in 2013. That same year he was awarded the GUSI International Peace Prize for his humanitarian and peace activism. In 2014 Jandali was awarded the Global Music Humanitarian Award for his contribution to peace and justice for the Syrian children. Inspired by stories from the
Arab Spring, in April 2011 Jandali wrote
Watani Ana (I am my Homeland). In June his scheduled appearance at the annual convention of the
American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC) was cancelled, reportedly because he planned to perform
Watani Ana. and was featured in the 2014 BBC series "What Freedom Looks Like". In 2016, he performed and spoke at the annual
Skoll World Forum at Oxford University and
Aspen Ideas Festival. In 2017 he spoke at the Sydney Ideas at the
University of Sydney. In 2021, he spoke at the closing ceremony of the World Innovation Summit of Education (WISE) and in 2022 he performed at the Generation Amazing opening ceremony during
FIFA World Cup Qatar. Jandali has given lectures, masterclasses and workshops at numerous universities and institutions such as Harvard, Duke, Columbia, UCLA, Notre Dame, Rice, Vanderbilt, Fordham, CU Boulder, and Queens. == Awards ==