Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Olusegun Matthew Okikiola Aremu Obasanjo (or Matthew Olusegun Aremu Obasanjo) was born in Ibogun-Olaogun, a village in southwest Nigeria. [7] His later passport gave his date of birth as 5 March 1937, although this was a later estimate, with no contemporary records surviving. [ 8 ]
Al-Munir`s cover. Al-Munir was an Islamic magazine, written in Arabic-Malay, published in Padang from 1911 until 1915. Inaugurated by the initiative of Abdullah Ahmad in early April 1911, Al-Munir was listed as the first Islamic mass media in Indonesia.
This is an alphabetical list of topics related to Islam, the history of Islam, Islamic culture, and the present-day Muslim world, intended to provide inspiration for the creation of new articles and categories. This list is not complete; please add to it as needed.
Amongst these, the revivalist movements of three leading religious reformers – Shah Wali Allah of Delhi (1702–1763), the Arabian Muhammad Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab (1703–1792), and the Nigerian Uthman dan Fodio (1755–1816) – are widely regarded as the precursors of the modern-era Pan-Islamist thought.
Until the early 1970s, [7] non-Muslim Islamic scholars—while not accepting accounts of divine intervention—did accept Islam's origin story [8] "in most of its details", [9] and accepted the reliability of its traditional literary sources – tafsir (commentaries on the Quran), [10] hadith (accounts of what the Islamic prophet Muhammad ...
Ibrahim Muhammadu Maccido Abubakar III CFR (20 April 1928 – 29 October 2006), often shortened to Muhammadu Maccido, was the 19th Sultan of Sokoto in Nigeria.He was the son and primary aide to Siddiq Abubakar III (1903–1988) who had been the Sultan of Sokoto for 50 years.
Remove Soto from the equation, and the division’s $972.75 million outlay shrinks to $207.75 million, a smaller figure than that of the AL East, AL West and NL West. That points to a bigger story.
Obasanjo was released from prison. 1999: 10 February: Obasanjo was elected President. 29 May: Obasanjo was sworn in, ushering in the Fourth Republic. 19 December: Obasanjo ordered the Nigerian Armed Forces to raid the town of Odi in the Niger Delta, in response to the murder of twelve policemen by local militia. 2000: 27 January