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  2. Al-Hayat Media Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Hayat_Media_Center

    Al-Hayat Media Center (Arabic: مركز الحياة للإعلام) is a media wing of the Islamic State. [1] [2] It was established in mid-2014 and targets international (non-Arabic) audiences as opposed to their other Arabic-focused media wings and produces material, mostly Nasheeds, in English, German, Russian, Urdu, Indonesian, Turkish, Bengali, Chinese, Bosnian, Kurdish, Uyghur, and French.

  3. Al-Hayat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Hayat

    Al-Hayat was restarted by Jamil Mrowa and Adel Bishtawi in 1988. [7] The paper was bought in 1988 by the Saudi Prince Khalid bin Sultan. [12] Owing to the newly relaunched newspaper's majority Christian Lebanese and Christian Palestinian management, critics dubbed Al-Hayat "a newspaper of minorities in the service of a prince," especially after publishing criticisms by Kurds and Shiites ...

  4. Ma'had Al-Zaytun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ma'had_Al-Zaytun

    Ma'had Al-Zaytun or Al-Zaytun Islamic Boarding School (Indonesian: Pondok Pesantren Al-Zaytun) is an Islamic boarding school located in Indramayu Regency, West Java.This Islamic boarding school is a business of the Yayasan Pesantren Indonesia (Indonesian Islamic Boarding School Foundation, YPI), which began construction on August 13, 1996.

  5. Essence of Life (book) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Essence_of_Life_(book)

    Essence of Life, or Ayn al-Hayat, is a book of Hadith in Persian by Muhammad Baqir al-Majlisi (1616–1698 CE). [1] [2] Contents. Chapter Names: [3]

  6. Hay'at Tahrir al-Sham - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hay'at_Tahrir_al-Sham

    From September to November 2017, there were a series of assassinations of HTS leaders, in particular foreign clerics associated with the most hardline elements, such as Abu Talha al-Ordini, Abu Abdulrahman al-Mohajer, Abu Sulaiman al-Maghribi, Abu Yahya al-Tunisi, Suraqa al-Maki and Abu Mohammad al-Sharii, as well as some local military leaders ...

  7. Munir al-Rayyes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Munir_al-Rayyes

    In the same year, be began writing for the newspapers al-Ayyam (Damascus) and al-Hayat (Beirut). Munir opposed the Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon imposed in 1920 and in 1925 left his job to join the revolt of Sultan al-Atrash. At the end of the revolt, in 1927, Rayyes returned to Damascus, where he was a regular writer for al-Hayyat.

  8. Maya Al-Hayat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maya_Al-Hayat

    Maya Abu Al-Hayat (1980) is a Palestinian novelist, poet, storyteller, and translator, born in Beirut.She has published three novels and three collections of poetry. Her books have gained worldwide recognition, and some of her stories have been translated into different languages.

  9. Dunya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunya

    "Dunya" is an Arabic word that means "lower or lowest", [1] or "nearer or nearest", [2] which is understood as a reference to the "lower world, this world here below". [3] The term "dunya" is employed to refer to the present world "as it is closest to one’s life as opposed to the life of the Hereafter". [4]