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Martin Scorsese in 2024.. After Raging Bull in the early 1980s, Martin Scorsese considered quitting filmmaking, wanting to travel to Rome to shoot a series of television documentaries on the lives of different saints: "I literally thought it would be my last film," said Scorsese in 2016, referring to Raging Bull.
Martin Scorsese is partnering with Fox Nation for an eight-part docudrama series, “Martin Scorsese Presents: The Saints.” Hosted, narrated and executive produced by Scorsese, the series will ...
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Tazkirat al-Awliyā (Persian: تذکرةالاولیا or تذکرةالاولیاء, lit."Biographies of the Saints") – variant transliterations: Tadhkirat al-Awliya, Tazkerat-ol-Owliya, Tezkereh-i-Evliā etc. – is a hagiographic collection of ninety-six Sufi saints (wali, plural awliya) and their miracles authored by the Sunni Muslim Persian poet and mystic Farīd al-Dīn ‘Aṭṭar of ...
Following the completion of The Joseph Smith Papers TV series, the same team that produced that series began work on the History of the Saints. [1] A full-length preview of the program was shown October 2, 2010, on KSL-TV, following the Saturday morning session of the 180th Semiannual General Conference. [2]
The book tells the story of 70 different saints. [4] For instance, the book includes stories about Thérèse of Lisieux, Joan of Arc, and Francis of Assisi. [5] The book focuses on Catholic saints and does not include Anglican saints. [6] The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Oklahoma City criticized the book for making some factual errors. [7]
Collected stories about the "lives or vitae of the saints", began to be compiled "and transmitted at an early stage" [1] by many regular Muslim scholars, including Ibn Abi al-Dunya (d. 894), [1] who wrote a work entitled Kitāb al-Awliyāʾ (Lives of the Saints) in the ninth-century, which constitutes "the earliest [complete] compilation on the ...
Abu al-Abbas al-Mursi (1219–1287, buried in Anfoushi, one of the four master saints of Egypt) Abul Hasan Hankari (1018–1093, buried in Baghdad, noted scholar and miracle worker) Adam Khaki (14th century, buried in Badarpur, Assam, took part in the Conquest of Sylhet and preached at Badarpur)