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The Arab newspapers industry started in the early 19th century with the American newspaper Kawkab America.(Arabic: كوكب أميركا, 'Star of America') was an Arabic-language weekly (later daily) newspaper published in New York City, United States, it was the first Arabic-language newspaper in North America; it was founded by Najib Arbeely and Ibrahim Arbeely.
National Library of Israel newspaper collection (in Arabic, English and Hebrew) Newspaper SG - Singaporean newspapers dating back to 1827 Papers Past – digitization project of the National Library of New Zealand; over 6 million New Zealand newspaper pages, 270 thousand pages of magazine and journal content, as well as certain letters, diaries ...
The old key to the Kaaba, which was used during the late Mamluk period. The person who takes up the role receives the title Custodian of the Kaaba (Arabic: سدانة الكعبة, Sadinat al-Ka'bah). The current custodian of the Kaaba is Sheikh Abdul Wahhab bin Zain Al-Abidin Al-Shaibi.
Youm7 was first published as a weekly paper in October 2008 and has been published daily since 31 May 2011. [2] Editor Khaled Salah said shortly after the paper's expansion to daily publication that Youm7 "supports the popular need for a civil state and will strive to present facts to readers without political bias and with credible representation of diverse views."
The Arab American News (Arabic: صدى الوطن) is a weekly bilingual newspaper representing Arab Americans published in Dearborn, Michigan, USA in Greater Detroit. [1] It began publishing on 7 September 1984 and its publisher is Lebanese-born Osama Siblani. [2] It is believed to be the oldest and largest Arab-American newspaper. [3]
The paper devotes three pages to op-ed writing, divided into what it calls Arabic: منبر القدس "The Al Quds Pulpit" (a forum for reader submission), Arabic: مدارات "Orbits" (or trends), and Arabic: رأي "Opinion". The paper devotes more space to opinion and less space to business news and sports, as compared with competitors ...
The Al-Arab media organization also helped fund Ahval, a news website launched by Yavuz Baydar, a Turkish journalist who left Turkey following the 2016 Turkish coup d'état attempt. Qantara.de suspects Al-Arab and the government of the United Arab Emirates of influencing the creation of Ahval's Arabic language service. [3]
Babel (Arabic: بابل, lit."Babylon") was an Iraqi newspaper which was published under the direction of Uday Hussein, the son of Saddam Hussein.It was known for carrying Western reports on Iraq's conflict with the United States and was said to be the most influential newspaper in the country and alongside the television channel Youth TV (Al-Shabab), which aired reports by other Arab channels ...