Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
As the journalists left the scene after filming, a car containing al-Bursh and his colleague Abu Amr in the Palestine Today TV channel was hit by a missile projected from an Israeli drone. [ 8 ] [ 4 ] Seven minute later a missile hit the car in front of the first one, this time containing Hamza, Thuraya, a third journalist named Hazem Rajab ...
Hamza Al-Farissi (Berber: ⵃⴰⵎⵣⴰ ⵍⴼⴰⵔⵉⵙⵉ, Ḥamza l-Farisi; Arabic: حمزة الفارسي, romanized: Ḥamza al-Fārsī; French: [amza al faʁisi]; born 1 August 1994), better known by the mononym Hamza, is a Belgian rapper, singer and record producer. Hamza was signed to Rec. 118 and Warner Music.
Hamzah bin Al Hussein OSJ (Arabic: حمزة بن الحسين; born 29 March 1980) [1] is the fourth son of King Hussein bin Talal of Jordan overall and the first by his American-born fourth wife, Queen Noor.
The hamza (Arabic: هَمْزَة hamza) ( ء ) is an Arabic script character that, in the Arabic alphabet, denotes a glottal stop and, in non-Arabic languages, indicates a diphthong, vowel, or other features, depending on the language.
Hamza Bali was a Bosnian Sufi leader, who was executed in Istanbul in 1573 on charges of heresy. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] He was the founder of the Hamzevis , a heterodox Sufi order. [ 3 ] According to Noel Malcolm , "Little is known about his teachings, though they apparently went far beyond the Bektashi in admitting elements of Christian theology". [ 4 ]
Hamza Humo (30 December 1895 – 19 January 1970) was a Bosnian poet, dramatist, and writer of short novels. His nephew Avdo Humo was a communist politician in Yugoslavia. Early life
Hamza (also spelled as Hamzah, Hamsah, Hamzeh, Humza, Khamzat or Hamëz; Arabic: حَمْزَة, romanized: Ḥamzah) is an Arabic masculine given name in the Muslim world. It means lion, strong, and steadfast. [ 1 ]
The Hamza story soon grew, ramified, traveled and gradually spread over immense areas of the Muslim world. It was translated into Arabic (Sīrat Amīr Ḥamza); [8] there is a twelfth-century Georgian version, [6] and a fifteenth-century Turkish version twenty-four volumes long.