in New York City. From left to right: Sheikha Moza,
Michelle Obama, the US First Lady, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani, and
Barack Obama, the US president. Sheikha Moza co-founded and chairs the
Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development (QF), which was set up in 1995. She has dedicated her efforts to advancing education reforms in Qatar through the QF. This non-profit organization was established by her husband the same year he assumed the role of emir. Sheikha Moza has been vocal in advocating for the protection of education in warzones, and Protect Education in Insecurity and Conflict (PEIC) was established under the auspices of Education Above All with the aim of promoting and providing education to children living in areas of conflict and war. After Qatar advocated for the establishment of 9 September as the
International Day to Protect Education from Attack, established by unanimous resolution of the UN General Assembly, Sheikha Moza has spoken at each observance of the Day: online in 2020 and 2021, at UNESCO in Paris in 2022, at the United Nations Headquarters in New York in 2023, and in Doha in 2024. Sheikha Moza has acted as chairperson of
Silatech since 2008, chairperson of the
Arab Democracy Foundation, and founded the Supreme Council for Family Affairs in 1998. She was vice president of the Supreme Education Council from 2002 until 2012 and was made
UNESCO's Special Envoy for Basic and Higher Education in 2003, a position she resigned in November 2023, because of UNESCO's silence about the plight of Palestinian children. In 2002, she and former Emir Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani opened the
Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar. She is a member of the Board of Overseers of
Weill Cornell Medicine, and chairperson of
Sidra Medical and Research Center, a high-tech women's and children's hospital in Doha. She also endowed this medical center with $7.9 billion. In 2007 and 2010, Sheikha Moza was listed as one of the '100 Most Powerful Women' by Forbes. She was also listed in the 'Top 100 most powerful Arabs' from 2013 to 2017 by
Gulf Business. In 2011 she placed second on the
Vanity Fair International Best Dressed Women's list, and in 2015 she was named in the Vanity Fair
International Best Dressed Hall of Fame List. According to
Vogue, she has customised
haute couture designs to fit Qatari modesty rules. She has been involved with Fashion Trust Arabia (FTA), launched in September 2018, which focuses on womenswear designs. According to Human Rights Watch, Sheikha Moza's
Education Above All scholarship program requires non-Qatari female students who wish to study to provide a "signed consent letter and undertaking by family guardian (allowing EAA to access and confirm private information of the family)." In 2010, she played a key role in the campaign to host the
2022 FIFA World Cup. She denies the accusations of Qatari corruption in the FIFA world cup process. In 2020, a book called
Pregnancy and Miscarriage in Qatar: Women, Reproduction and the State discussed the changing role of women in Qatari society, and analysed how Qatari women navigate the competing expectations placed upon them, in which Sheikha Moza played an essential role in reflecting the nation as a centre of Arab modernity, availing themselves of the new opportunities in work, politics and public life. Sheikha Moza herself has sought to clarify that she is "not a
feminist". == Political role ==