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Hamida Pehlwan
Hamida is an Arabic given name that means praiseworthy, and it is the feminine form of the name Hamid. In Azerbaijani it becomes Həmidə. It may refer to: People *DJ Hamida, Moroccan DJ and record producer based in France Given name * Hamida Addèche (born 1932), French long-distance runner *Hamida al-Attas (born 1934), the mother of Osama bin Laden *Hamida Banu Begum (1527–1604), wife of the second Mughal Emperor, Humayun, and the mother of Mughal Emperor, Akbar *Hamida Banu Shova, founder and chairperson of Queens University, Bangladesh *Hamida Barmaki (1970–2011) Afghan law professor and human rights activist *Hamida Djandoubi (1949–1977), the last person to be guillotined in France, at Baumettes Prison in Marseille * Hamida Ghafour, Canadian journalist and author of Afghan origin *Hamida Habibullah (1916–2018), Indian parliamentarian, educationist and social worker * Hamida Al-Habsi (born 1987), Omani shot putter and discus thrower *Hamida Javanshir (1873–1955), Azer ...
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Hamid
Hamid refers to two different but related Arabic given names, both of which come from the Arabic triconsonantal root of Ḥ-M-D (ِِح-م-د): # (Arabic: حَامِد ''ḥāmid'') also spelled Haamed, Hamid or Hamed, and in Turkish Hamit; it means "lauder" or "one who praises". # (Arabic: حَمِيد ''ḥamīd'') also spelled Hamid, or Hameed, in Turkish is Hamit, and in Azeri is Həmid or Һәмид; it means "lauded" or "praiseworthy". Given name Hamid * Hamid Ahmadi (historian) (b. 1945), Iranian historian * Hamid Ahmadi (futsal) (b. 1988), Iranian futsal player * Hamid Ahmadieh, Iranian ophthalmologist and medical scientist * Hamid Al Shaeri, Egyptian-Libyan singer, songwriter, and musician *Hamid Arasly, Azeri and Soviet scientist *Hamid Arzulu, Azerbaijani poet and writer *Hamid Berhili (born 1964), Moroccan boxer *Hamid Mahmood Butt, Pakistani ophthalmologist *Hamid Chitchian (born c. 1957), Iranian politician *Hamid Drake, American musician *Hamid Etemad, Iranian p ...
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Hamida Khuhro
Hamida Khuhro (August 13, 1936 – February 12, 2017) was a Pakistani politician and historian who twice served as Sindh's Minister for Education and also served as a professor of history at the University of Sindh. Early life and education Khuhro is the daughter of Muhammad Ayub Khuhro, a former chief minister of Sindh. She has a PhD in South Asian History from the University of London and also attended the Universities of Karachi, Cambridge and Oxford. Career As an academic historian, Khuhro taught at Karachi and Oxford universities before becoming a professor at Sindh University. In 1971, when military action was launched in East Pakistan, she was a student at Oxford University. She was one of the few Pakistanis who openly condemned it, saying: "I am ashamed to be a Pakistani." A section of the press in West Pakistan denounced her for condemning the military action. She left Sindh University to concentrate on politics and writing. She joined the Sindh National Alliance in ...
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Hamidah (other)
Hamidah or Hamida is the female version of the Arabic name Hamid Hamid refers to two different but related Arabic given names, both of which come from the Arabic triconsonantal root of Ḥ-M-D (ِِح-م-د): # (Arabic: حَامِد ''ḥāmid'') also spelled Haamed, Hamid or Hamed, and in Turkish Hamit; it .... It may refer to: Places * Hamidah, Yemen, a village in Yemen People * Fatimah Hasan Delais (1915-1953), an Indonesian novelist who wrote under the pen name Hamidah * Wanda Hamidah (1977-), an Indonesian politician and activist * Hamida Nana (1946-), a Syrian writer {{disambiguation ...
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A Girl Named Maĥmood
''A Girl Named Mahmoud'' ( ar, بنت اسمها محمود; ''Bint Ismaha Maĥmood'') is a 1975 Egyptian comedy film directed by Niasi Mustafa. Samar Habib, author of ''Female Homosexuality in the Middle East: Histories and Representations'', wrote that the film "exploits the genre of transvestism as comedy" and that "several homoerotic images can be presented safely and innocently to mainstream audiences" through a female character pretending to be a male.Habib, p126 She explained that because no characters consciously desire those of the same sex and because Ĥamida is still a woman, the film puts the audience "at ease".Habib, p129 Habib added that "the question of hether homoeroticism is forbidden in religiondoes not surface so much as the issues of cultural belief, perhaps because the two can sometimes be interchangeable." Habib concluded that the film does not successfully thoroughly examine homoerotic desire and that the film "attempts to rationalize homosexuality as a form ...
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Mongi Ben Hamida
Mongi Ben Hamida (Arabic: منجي بن حميدة), born 1 February 1928 in Kelibia, and died on May 4, 2003, was a Tunisian neurologist and neuropsychiatrist. Education After finishing his primary education in Kairouan, Ain drahem and Kelibia, Mongi Ben Hamida completed his secondary education at Sadiki College, where he got his baccalaureate degree in 1948. Later, he enrolled in medical studies at the Medical School of Paris (divided in 1970) where he specialized in neurology. His thesis on the dento-olivary pair in 1965 won him a Prix de Thèse (thesis prize) and quickly became an international clinical and neuropathological reference. Mongi Ben Hamida held a diploma of advanced studies in histology and cytology under the direction of Professor René Couteaux. Medical career During his stay in France, Mongi Ben Hamida worked as a Clinic Chief at the Salpêtrière hospital, in the unit of Professor Raymond Garcin, then in Professor Boudin's, a great master of French n ...
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Adil Mabrouk Bin Hamida
The United States Department of Defense acknowledges holding Tunisian detainees in Guantanamo. A total of 779 detainees have been held in extrajudicial detention in the Guantanamo Bay detention camps, in Cuba since the camps opened on January 11, 2002 The camp population peaked in 2004 at approximately 660. Only nineteen new detainees, all "high value detainees" have been transferred there since the United States Supreme Court's ruling in Rasul v. Bush. By July 2012 the camp held 168 captives. On February 24, 2010, Carol Rosenberg, of the ''Miami Herald'', reported that Albania accepted the transfer of three former detainees, a Tunisian, Saleh Bin Hadi Asasi and Sharif Fati Ali al Mishad and Rauf Omar Mohammad Abu al Qusin, an Egyptian, and a Libyan Demographics of Libya is the demography of Libya, specifically covering population density, ethnicity, education level, health of the populace, economic status, and religious affiliations, as well as other aspects of the ...
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Bani Hamida
The Bani Hamida () are a nomad bedouin tribe living in Jordan. History In 1869 members of the Bani Hamida shattered the recently discovered Moabite Stone into pieces by lighting a fire under it and then pouring cold water over it. The stele was discovered by Henry Baker Tristram on his trip with Sheikh Sattam Al-Fayez when they visited the Bani Hamida's territory. When Emir Fendi Al-Fayez sent his cousin's son Eid to negotiate the sale of the stone, members of the Bani Hamida decided to destroy the stone as an act of defiance of the Ottomans. In the aftermath, several Bani Hamida were killed. Though many of the fragments were later retrieved, the full text, one of the earliest Hebrew related scripts, is only preserved through a hurried copy made under difficult conditions. The Bani Hamida also had a reputation for breeding "the best blood horses in Moab", according to explorer Charles M. Doughty, 1876. In 1891, there was fighting between the Beni Sakher and the Bani Hamida. F ...
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Hamida Pahalwan
Hamida Pahalwan (7 April 1907 – 12 April 1984) was a Pakistani wrestler. He was the former Rustam-i-Hind and one of the elite champions of the British Raj. Early life Hamida Pahalwan was born in 1907 during British Raj. He started his training at the age of six in Radhanpur and earned title of Rustam-i-Hind during 1930s. He worked as an official wrestler for the Nawab Jalaluddin of Radhanpur and also trained Aslam Pahalwan. Following partition, he went to Lahore, Pakistan and remained there until his death in 1984. Death He died on April 12, 1984 in Lahore, Pakistan. Hamida Pahalwan was the maternal uncle of the Bholu Brothers of Pakistan. He was the trainer of Bholu Pahalwan Manzoor Hussain (1922–1985), also known as Bholu Pahalwan, was a Pakistani wrestler and held the world heavyweight title. Biography Bholu came from a Kashmiri family of renowned wrestlers from Amritsar and after the independence of Paki ... and Aslam Pahalwan. References People ...
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Hamida Omarova
Hamida Mammad qizi Omarova ( az, Həmidə Ömərova, born 25 April 1957 in Baku) is an Azerbaijani actress. Early life Hamida Omarova was born to a family of teachers, Mammad and Nasiba Omarov. Her parents met at university where both of them studied foreign languages, and went on to have four children, three of whom died in their infancy. When Hamida was born, her parents visited the Sufi Hamid shrine in Qazakh and after being sure the newborn would survive, they named her after the sanctuary. Following her parents' divorce in 1960 and her father's permanent departure to his native Gazakh, Hamida Omarova was raised by her mother and grandmother. After graduating from high school she enrolled at Baku State University to study philology. While finishing her first year in 1975, she entered an academic contest along with other 300 people and was among the 15 contestants who were admitted to the Gerasimov Institute of Cinematography in Moscow.
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Hamida Rania Nefsi
Hamida Rania Nefsi (born 17 November 1997) is an Algerian swimmer. She represented Algeria at the 2015 African Games and at the 2019 African Games. At the 2015 African Games she won one gold medal and two bronze medals and at the 2019 African Games she won three silver medals and three bronze medals. At the 2018 African Swimming Championships held in Algiers, Algeria, she won the bronze medal in the women's 200 metre breaststroke event. She represented Algeria at the 2022 Mediterranean Games The 2022 Mediterranean Games ( ar, ألعاب البحر الأبيض المتوسط 2022, links=, lit=, translit=ʾAlʿāb al-Baḥr al-ʾAbyaḍ al-Mutawassiṭ 2022), officially known as the XIX Mediterranean Games and commonly known as Oran ... held in Oran, Algeria. References 1997 births Living people Place of birth missing (living people) Algerian female swimmers Swimmers at the 2014 Summer Youth Olympics African Games medalists in swimming African Games gold m ...
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Hamida Nana
Hamida Na'na (born 1946) is a Syrian writer and journalist. Her name also appears as Hamidah Nana. Biography She was born in Idlib and studied Arabic at Damascus University. She was employed as a journalist by the Syrian Ministry of Information. She then went to Paris, where she worked for UNESCO The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization is a specialized agency of the United Nations (UN) aimed at promoting world peace and security through international cooperation in education, arts, sciences and culture. It ... and was a reporter for the Lebanese newspaper '' Al Safir''. In 1970, she published ''Anashid imra'a la ta'rif al-farah'' (Hymns of a joyless woman), a collection of poems. She published the novel ''al-Watan fi-l-'Aynan'' (The Homeland) in 1979 and then the novel ''Man Yajru ala al-Shawq'' (Who dares to yearn) in 1989. She also published a collection of interviews ''Hiwarat ma`a Mofakiri al-Gharb'' (Conversations with Western Thinkers) (19 ...
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Hamida Javanshir
Hamida Ahmad bey qizi Javanshir ( az, Həmidə Cavanşir) (19 January 1873 – 6 February 1955) – One of the first enlightened women of Azerbaijan, wife of Jalil Mammadguluzadeh, daughter of historian Ahmad Bey Javanshir, philanthropist, translator, member of Azerbaijan Writers' Union. Early life Born on her family's ancestral estate in the village of Kahrizli, Hamida Javanshir was the eldest child of Ahmad bey Javanshir (1828–1903), an Azeri historian, translator and officer of the Russian Imperial army,Megastar and Her Light
An interview with Hamida Javanshir's granddaughter Dr. Mina Davatdarova. ''Gender-az.org''
and his wife Mulkijahan. She was the great-great-grandniece of