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Tawfic Abdel Jabbar was born and raised in Gretna, Louisiana. [9] [10] [11] His family frequently traveled to their ancestral home in Al-Mazra'a ash-Sharqiya, West Bank.[7] [12] [13] The Abdel Jabbar family had lived there for over 200 years and both of his parents had grown up in the village.
Abdul Jabbar (footballer) (1945 – March 2014), Pakistani footballer; Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (b. 1947), American basketball player; Abdul Jabbar (Tamil Nadu cricketer) (1952), Indian Tamil Nadu cricketer; Abdul-Jabar Hashim Hanoon (1970), Iraqi footballer who played defender; Karim Abdul-Jabbar, a previous name of Abdul-Karim al-Jabbar (1974 ...
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (/ k ə ˈ r iː m æ b ˈ d uː l dʒ ə ˈ b ɑːr / kə-REEM ab-DOOL jə-BAR; born Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Jr. (/ æ l ˈ s ɪ n d ər / al-SIN-dər); April 16, 1947) is an American former basketball player.
Qadi ʿAbd al-Jabbar's magnum opus, the Kitab al-mughni fi abwab al-tawhid wa l-ʿadl (Book of the plenitude on the topics concerning unity and justice), often shortened to al-Mughni, is a comprehensive twenty volume "summa" of Mu'tazilite theology of the same magnitude as St. Thomas Aquinas's Summa Theologica and Summa Contra Gentiles. [1]
Prominent members include Harith Sulayman al-Dhari (chairman), Muthanna Harith al-Dhari (chairman's son and spokesman, secretary-general as of 2018), [4] Abdel-Salam al-Kubaisi, Abdel-Sattar Abdel-Jabbar (founder, and senior official), [5] Dr. Muhammad Bashar al-Faithi, Abdel Hamid Al-Ani, Ahmed Abdul Ghafour al-Samarrai, Mahdi Ibrahim, Abu Bashir al-Tarousi, and Umar Raghib.
Jabbar (Arabic: جبار) is an Arabic word meaning "great" or "mighty". With the definite article as al-Jabbar (Arabic: الجبار ) it is one of the names of God in Islam , and is so used in the given name Abd al-Jabbar (Arabic: عبد الجبار ).
Ganzibra Jabbar Choheili (1923–2014), head of the Mandaean community in Iran until his death in 2014. Rishama Salah Choheili , Iranian Mandaean who is the current patriarch and head of the Mandaean community in Australia
Until 1969, this "Tudor mansion" [5] was the home of Thomas A. and Edith B. Cannon, founders of the Washington, D.C. "landmark" Cannon Steakhouse. [6] [7]The three-story "plush" residence was purchased in 1971 by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for $78,000, [8] [9] who donated it for use as the headquarters of the Hanafi Madh-Hab in November 1972.