Amat (name Prefix)
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Amat (name Prefix)
Amat ( ar, امة ) is a word meaning "female slave" or "servant", used in conjunction with an Names of God in Islam, Islamic name of God to form a female given name.{{cite book, title= A Dictionary of Muslim Names, first= Salahuddin , last=Ahmed Examples of such names and their bearers are: * Amat Al Alim Alsoswa (born 1958), Yemeni politician * Amatu'l-Bahá Rúhíyyih Khánum (1910 – 2000), wife of Shoghi Effendi, Guardian of the Baháʼí Faith * Amatul Kibria Keya Chowdhury, Bangladesh Awami League politician * Amat al-Razzak Hammed, Yemeni Minister for social affairs * Amat-Mamu (fl. c. 1750 BC), Babylonian scribe References Arabic feminine given names ...
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Names Of God In Islam
Names of God in Islam ( ar, أَسْمَاءُ ٱللَّٰهِ ٱلْحُسْنَىٰ , "''Allah's Beautiful Names''") are names attributed to God in Islam by Muslims. While some names are only in the Quran, and others are only in the hadith, there are some names which appear in both. List Hadith By what they said to Sahih Bukhari Hadith: There is another Sahih Muslim Hadith: The Quran refers to God's ''Most Beautiful Names'' (''al-ʾasmāʾ al-ḥusná'') in several Surahs. Gerhard Böwering refers to Surah 1(17:110)as the ''locus classicus'' to which explicit lists of 99 names used to be attached in tafsir. A cluster of more than a dozen Divine epithets which are included in such lists is found in Surah 59. Sunni mystic Ibn Arabi surmised that the 99 names are "outward signs of the universe's inner mysteries". Islamic mysticism There is a tradition in Sufism to the effect the 99 names of God point to a mystical " Most Supreme and Superior Name" (''ismu l-ʾAʿẓam' ...
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Amat Al Alim Alsoswa
Amat Al Alim Alsoswa ( ar, امة العليم السوسوه; Ta'izz, Yemen, August 27, 1958) is a Yemeni journalist, and Yemen's first female ambassador and minister. She served as the Assistant Secretary-General, then Assistant Administrator and finally Director of UNDP's Regional Bureau for Arab States. Biography Alsoswa began her career as a journalist at a very young age: she began broadcasting at the age of 10 as part of a local radio program in Taiz Governorate. Later on, she became a news anchor on Yemeni television, also serving as a political commentator. Alsoswa holds a B.A. in Mass Communications from Cairo University (1980) and an M.A. in International Communications from the American University in Washington, DC (1984). She speaks Arabic and English fluently and also speaks French and Russian. Between 1984 and 1986, she worked as Deputy TV Programs Director at Sana’a TV, where she held the most senior position as a woman in Yemeni television. Later, she became ...
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Rúhíyyih Khánum
Rúhíyyih Rabbání (8 August 1910 – 19 January 2000), born as Mary Sutherland Maxwell and best known by the title Amatu'l-Bahá Rúhíyyih Khánum, was the wife of Shoghi Effendi, the Guardian of the Baháʼí Faith, from 1937 to 1957. In 1952, she was elevated to the office of Hand of the Cause of God, for which she attended to issues related to the expansion and protection of the Baháʼí Faith, and served an important role in the transfer of authority from 1957 to 1963. Rúhíyyih Rabbání was raised in Montreal, Quebec. After two trips to the Baháʼí holy land in Haifa, Israel, she engaged in many youth activities in the Baháʼí community. She married Shoghi Effendi in 1937. After his death, Rúhíyyih Rabbání became for Baháʼís the last remaining link to the family of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, who headed the Baháʼí Faith from 1892 to 1921 and was the eldest son of the faith's founder, Baháʼu'lláh. In 2004, CBC viewers voted her number 44 on the list of "greatest ...
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Amatul Kibria Keya Chowdhury
Amatul Kibria Keya Chowdhury is a Bangladesh Awami League politician and a former Jatiya Sangsad member representing the Habiganj-1 constituency. Biography Amatul Kibria Keya Chowdhury's father was Commandant Manik Chowdhury, a Bangladesh Awami League politician and an accused in the Agartala Conspiracy Case. He fought for the independence of Bangladesh from Pakistan in 1971. Amatul's father died when she was eight years old. She is the secretary general of Chetona '71 in Habiganj District, a non-government organisation that documents the history of Bangladesh Liberation war. She was elected to parliament from the 28 number seat, based in Habiganj District, of the reserved seats for women in 2014. She has campaigned for the recognition of female "freedom fighters" by the government of Bangladesh and providing them with the facilities due under law. She was able to successfully get recognition for six female "freedom fighters". Chowdhury was hospitalized on 10 November 2017 af ...
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Amat Al-Razzak Hammed
Professor Amat al-Razzak Hammed is the former Minister for social affairs of Yemen. She has proposed adoption of a government policy to punish fathers who force their daughters into child marriages. References Living people Women government ministers of Yemen Child marriage in Yemen Year of birth missing (living people) Place of birth missing (living people) 21st-century Yemeni politicians 21st-century Yemeni women politicians Mujawar Cabinet Basindawa Cabinet {{Yemen-bio-stub ...
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Amat-Mamu
Amat-Mamu, fl. ca. 1750 BC, Sippar in ancient Babylonia, was a scribe whose existence is known from the cuneiform tablets on which she wrote. Amat-Mamu was a Naditu priestess and temple scribe in Sippar, in ancient Babylonia. We know she lived in the ''gagum,'' a walled cloister precinct inhabited exclusively by women, similar to a convent. Her name is known through Naditu documents that show Amat-Mamu was one of eight scribes within Sippar's ''gagum.'' Her career spanned the reigns of three kings, Hammurabi (1792–1750 BC), Samsu-iluna (1749–1712 BC), and Abi-eshuh Abī-Ešuḫ (variants: m''a-bi-ši'',''Chronicle of Early Kings'', (ABC 20), Tablet B, reverse, lines 8 to 10. "Abiši", m''E-bi-šum'',''Babylonian King List B'', obverse line 8. "Ebišum") was the 8th king of the 1st Dynasty of Babylon and rei ... (1711–1684 BC). References Biographical Notes on the Naditu Women of SipparRivkah Harris, Journal of Cuneiform Studies, Vol. 16, No. 1 (1962), pp. 1–12 ...
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