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Sabir Zafar
Sabir may refer to: People Peoples and language *Sabir people, 5th–7th century nomadic people who lived in the north of the Caucasus * Sabir language, or Mediterranean Lingua Franca, a pidgin language People with the name * Salimallah Sabir (born 1988), Kurdish peace activist *Adib Sabir, 12th-century royal poet of Persia *Agha Sabir (born 1981), Pakistani cricketer *Arman Sabir (fl. from 1993), Pakistani investigative journalist *Ayub Sabir (born 1940), Pakistani writer *Irfan Sabir (born 1977), Canadian lawyer and politician *Kenny Sabir (born c. 1975), Australian musician *Mirza Alakbar Sabir (1862–1911), Azerbaijani satirical poet and teacher * Mohammad Sabir (other), several people) * Mohammed Sabir (fl. 2006), British businessman * Naeem Sabir (died 2011), Pakistani human rights activist *Nazir Sabir (fl. from 1974), Pakistani mountaineer *Rafiq Sabir (born 1950), Kurdish poet * Rafiq Abdus Sabir (fl. 2005), American doctor convicted of supporting terrorism * Ras ...
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Sabir People
The Sabirs (Savirs, Suars, Sawar, Sawirk among others; el, Σάβιροι) were nomadic people who lived in the north of the Caucasus beginning in the late-5th -7th century, on the eastern shores of the Black Sea, in the Kuban area, and possibly came from Western Siberia. They were skilled in warfare, used siege machinery, had a large army (including women) and were boat-builders. They were also referred to as Huns, a title applied to various Eurasian nomadic tribes in the Pontic-Caspian Steppe during late antiquity. Sabirs led incursions into Transcaucasia in the , but quickly began serving as soldiers and mercenaries during the Byzantine-Sasanian Wars on both sides. Their alliance with the Byzantines laid the basis for the later Khazar-Byzantine alliance. Etymology Gyula Németh and Paul Pelliot considered Turkic etymology for Säbir/Sabïr/Sabar/Säβir/Sävir/Savar/Sävär/Sawār/Säwēr from the root *''sap-'' 'to go astray', i.e. the 'wanderers, nomads', placed in a group ...
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Mohammed Sabir
Mohammed Sabir is a British businessperson, chair of the award-winning Aagrah group of restaurants, which is based in Bradford, West Yorkshire. He was awarded an MBE award in 2006 for his charitable work in West Yorkshire. He was born in Chakswari, Mirpur District The Mirpur District ( ur, ) is one of the 10 districts of Pakistan's dependent territory of Azad Kashmir. The Mirpur District is bounded on the north by the Kotli District, on the east by the Bhimber District, on the south by the Gujrat Dis ..., Pakistan. References External linksAagrah Restaurant {{DEFAULTSORT:Sabir, Mohammed Living people 1940s births British restaurateurs English people of Mirpuri descent ...
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Sharif Sabir
Shaikh Muhammad Sharif Sabir (Urdu: شریف صابر‬; 18 May 1928 – 1 October 2015), better known as Sharif Sabir, was a Pakistani-Punjabi scholar, poet, researcher and educationist who is widely known for editing the most authentic version of Heer Waris Shah published in 1985. It took him over ten years to complete this work. Earlier, he had already written a book of poetry and edited ''Puran Bhagat'' of Qadir Yar, and translated parts of ''Gulistan'' and '' Bustan'' of Saadi Shirazi into Punjabi. He edited Sultan Bahu’s poetry collection ''Abiat-e-Bahu'', Mian Mohammad Bakhsh's monumental work of ''Saiful Muluk'', the poetry of Bulleh Shah and had just completed editing of the poetry of Baba Farid before his demise. Being also a scholar of Persian and Arabic, he undertook a Herculean translation of Ali Hajweri Gunj Bakhsh’s ''Kashf ul Mahjoob'' from Persian to Urdu. He was commissioned by the Punjab Auqaf Department. Early life Sharif Sabir was born into a poor h ...
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Sahib Shah Sabir
Sahib Shah Sabir ( ps, صاحب شاه صابر ; 1956–2007) was a renowned poet of the Pashto language in the modern era. He held a PhD degree in literature along with three master's degrees in Pashto literature, Urdu literature, and political science, all from the University of Peshawar. He has numerous published works including the poetry collections of Khobona and Takal along with other books written about Pashto literature. Karan Khan, a popular modern Pashto singer and poet, has released a complete audio album consisting of his Ghazals and Nazms titled Bya Hagha Makham De. His poetry is also sung by other notable singers such as Sardar Ali Takkar. Personal life Sahib Shah Sabir was born in 1956 in Malakand Division, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan, where he also spent his early life and graduated from school. He later moved to Peshawar to continue his higher education and literary career. Sahib Shah Sabir was a very rebellious (سرکشه) and arrogant (خو داره ان ...
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Rizwaan Sabir
The Nottingham Two were a student (Rizwaan Sabir) and a staff member (Hicham Yezza) of the University of Nottingham arrested in May 2008 for suspected involvement with Islamic terrorism. The operation was codenamed Operation Minerva. University staff had notified the police after finding an English copy of the so-called Al Qaeda Training Manual on a computer. Both men were released without charge in the following week after it became clear that the document, freely available from US government websites, was used for research about terrorism in the context of a university course, and that neither had any other connection to terrorism. The case was complicated by the fact that one of the two (Hicham Yezza) was re-arrested on immigration charges immediately after the release. The case resurfaced in May 2011 after a lecturer at the University of Nottingham, Rod Thornton, was suspended for producing a report that seemingly exposed the University of Nottingham for being involved in serio ...
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Rashid Sabir
Rashid Sabir Sindhi_language.html"_;"title="Sindhi_language">Sindhi:_رشيد_صابر),_10_January_1945_–_7_December_2012)was_a_Pakistani_film,_TV,_radio_and_stage_artist._He_wrote_300_dramas_for_Radio_Pakistan_and_dialogues_for_12_ Sindhi:_رشيد_صابر),_10_January_1945_–_7_December_2012)">Sindhi_language.html"_;"title="Sindhi_language">Sindhi:_رشيد_صابر),_10_January_1945_–_7_December_2012)was_a_Pakistani_film,_TV,_radio_and_stage_artist._He_wrote_300_dramas_for_Radio_Pakistan_and_dialogues_for_12_Sindhi_cinema">Sindhi_language_films._He_also_acted_in_a_number_of_TV_serials_and_plays. __Childhood_and_career_ Rashid_Sabir_was_born_on_10_January_1945_at_village_Manko_( Sindhi:_رشيد_صابر),_10_January_1945_–_7_December_2012)">Sindhi_language.html"_;"title="Sindhi_language">Sindhi:_رشيد_صابر),_10_January_1945_–_7_December_2012)was_a_Pakistani_film,_TV,_radio_and_stage_artist._He_wrote_300_dramas_for_Radio_Pakistan_and_dialogues_for_12_Sindhi_c ...
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Rafiq Abdus Sabir
Rafiq Abdus Sabir is an American doctor convicted of supporting terrorism, for agreeing to provide medical treatment to insurgents wounded in the US-led Invasion of Iraq. Born in New York City, Sabir was raised by his mentally ill mother after his father abandoned the family. He graduated from Columbia University and worked as an emergency room physician in Boca Raton, Florida, (including at Glades General Hospital) and Saudi Arabia, paying off $750,000 in medical school debts, living with his common-law wife, Arlene Morgan, and their two sons. He was approached by undercover FBI agent Ali Soufan, who pretended to be a member of al-Qaeda wanting to set up medical care for injured fighters. Sabir was arrested on May 28, 2005, at his home in the Villa San Remo gated community, where he had lived for the previous two years. Sabir is a friend of Tarik Shah, a New York jazz musician and martial-arts expert who was convicted of agreeing to provide training to Iraqi insurgents. ...
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Rafiq Sabir
Rafiq Sabir ( ku, Refîq Sabir; born in 1950) is a contemporary Kurdish people, Kurdish poet. He was born in ''Qaladzê'' in Iraqi Kurdistan. In 1974, he received Bachelor of Arts degree from Baghdad University. He moved to Sweden in 1989. He writes in the sorani dialect. He belongs to the post-Abdulla Goran generation of modernists in Kurdish language, Kurdish poetry. Works #Karwansara, 146 pp., Uppsala, 1990. #Towards history : a short ideological historical study, 129 pp., Uppsala, 1991. #Werze berdine, 39 pp., Uppsala 1992. #Awêne û sêber : Komele honrawe, 88 pp., Arzan Publishers, Jönköping, 1996. . #Impiratoryayî lam : derbarey îslam, xêl û nasyonalîzm, 230 pp., Rabûn Publishers, Uppsala, 1998. . #Rûnbûnewe : honrawe, 111 pp., Rabûn Publishers, Uppsala, 2001. . References External linksRafiq Sabir, Immigrant-institutet
(in Swedish) Kurdish poets Kurdish people 1950 births Living people University of Baghdad alumni {{Kurd-poet-stub ...
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Nazir Sabir
Nazir Sabir (Urdu: نذیر صابر ) is a Pakistani mountaineer. He was born in Hunza. He has climbed Mount Everest and four of the five 8000 m peaks in Pakistan, including the world's second highest mountain K2 in 1981, Gasherbrum II 8035m, Broad Peak 8050m in 1982, and Gasherbrum I ( Hidden Peak) 8068m in 1992. He became the first from Pakistan to have climbed Everest on 17 May 2000 as a team member on the Mountain Madness Everest Expedition led by Christine Boskoff from the United States that also included famed Everest climber Peter Habeler of Austria and eight Canadians. Climbing career Sabir began his Himalayan climbing career with a Japanese expedition to the 7284m Passu Peak in Hunza in 1974. In 1975 he was part of a German Expedition as a trainee that attempted Nanga Parbat (8125m) and only went to 6700m up the south west ridge. On 17 July 1976 he made the first ascent of 6660m virgin Paiyu followed by Colonel Manzoor Hussain and Major Bashir with the first P ...
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Naeem Sabir
Naeem Sabir was a prominent social worker and a human rights activist in Khuzdar, Balochistan. Sabir had been associated with the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan (HRCP) since 1997 and had been working to promote human rights in the district. In the recent past, he had been helping the Commission in documenting the cases of enforced disappearances of students, lawyers, political activists and other citizens and the subsequent recovery of their bullet-ridden, mutilated bodies in desolate places in the province. Sabir was shot dead by armed motorcyclists in Khuzdar district in March 2011. An armed group called Baloch Musla Defai Tanzee, which is believed to be working at the behest of intelligence agencies of Pakistan to thwart a snowballing insurgency in the oil and gas rich province, claimed responsibility for the assassination. Sabir was survived by a bereaved widow and a less than 2-year-old child. Naeem Sabir's assassination was condemned by the Human Rights Commission of Pa ...
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Mohammad Sabir (other)
Mohammad Sabir can refer to: * Mohammad Sabir (cricketer, born 1943), a Pakistani cricketer * Mohammad Sabir (cricketer, born 2001), an Afghan cricketer * Mohammad Sabir (cricketer, born 2002), an Afghan cricketer * Mohammed Sabir Mohammed Sabir is a British businessperson, chair of the award-winning Aagrah group of restaurants, which is based in Bradford, West Yorkshire. He was awarded an MBE award in 2006 for his charitable work in West Yorkshire. He was born in Chakswa ...
(fl. 2006), British businessman {{hndis, Sabir, Mohammad ...
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Sabir Language
The Mediterranean Lingua Franca, or Sabir, was a pidgin language that was used as a lingua franca in the Mediterranean Basin from the 11th to the 19th centuries. Etymology ''Lingua franca'' meant literally " Frankish language" in Late Latin, and it originally referred specifically to the language that was used around the Eastern Mediterranean Sea as the main language of commerce. However, the term "Franks" was actually applied to all Western Europeans during the late Byzantine Period. Later, the meaning of ''lingua franca'' expanded to mean any bridge language. Its other name in the Mediterranean area was ''Sabir'', a term cognate of ("to know") in most Iberian languages and of Italian and French . Origins Based mostly on Northern Italy's languages (mainly Venetian and Genoese) and secondarily from Occitano-Romance languages (Catalan and Occitan) in the western Mediterranean area at first, Lingua Franca later came to have more Spanish and Portuguese elements, espe ...
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