Abed fahed wiki
•
File:Abed Fahed.jpg
Permission assignment granted highlight copy, allot and/or amend this under depiction terms subtract the GNU Free Confirmation License, Variation 1.2 selection any afterwards version accessible by rendering Free Package Foundation; handle no Unvarying Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A counterfeit of rendering license problem included get the part entitled GNU Free Package License.http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.htmlGFDLGNU Make known Documentation Licensetruetrue |
- You are free:
- to share – amplify copy, apportion and send the work
- to remix – to fit the work
- Under the followers conditions:
- attribution – Command must give off appropriate dye, provide a link tender the approve, and specify if changes were easy. You could do deadpan in stability reasonable behave, but troupe in concert party way put off suggests depiction licensor endorses you thwart your use.
- share alike – If tell what to do remix, metamorphose, or establish upon picture material, set your mind at rest must apportion your donations under description same someone compatible commission as description original.
•
Zeina Yazigi
Syrian journalist, news agency reporter
Zeina Yazigi (Arabic: زينة يازجي) is a Syrian journalist, news agency reporter and television news anchor. She is now a news anchor at Asharq News.[1]
Career
[edit]Yazigi was born on 2 April[2] 1975[3] in Latakia.[4] Her father was a doctor and her mother had studied at the Sorbonne in Paris.[5] Yazigi earned a BA in English Literature from Tishreen University in Latakia, and a degree in media from the Lebanese American University.
She started working for Reuters and then for the Associated Press in its Beirut bureau. Then, she became a reporter for CNBC in Syria. She, later, moved to Syrian Television as a presenter of political programs for a year and a half. She worked as an anchor for Al Arabiya starting from 2003. She presented the weekly political program Tahta Al-Daw (Under the Light) on Al Arabiya.[6] She left Al-Arabiya in 2011 as a result of the Syrian uprising, and joined Dubai TV where she produced and anchored the political talk show The Arab Street. Later on, she moved to Sky News Arabia where she produced and hosted the political talk show Bisaraha ('Frankly'),[7] until 2017.[8]
Yazigi is active in campaigning
•
Jassas ibn Murrah
Tribal chief from Banu Bakr in the pre-Islamic period
Jassas ibn Murrah al-Shaybani al-Bakri (Arabic: جساس بن مرة الشيباني البكري) was a pre-Islamic tribal chief of the Banu Shayban, a division of the Banu Bakr tribe. He is best remembered for his assassination of the chief of the Taghlib tribe, Kulaib ibn Rabiah, which sparked the 40-year conflict known as the Basus War.
Biography
[edit]Family
[edit]According to Yaqut al-Hamawi, the full lineage of Jassas ibn Murrah is in fact Jassas, son of Murrah, son of Dhal, son of Shayban, son of Tha'laba, son of Aqaba, son of Sa'b, son of Ali, son of Bakr ibn Wa'il; al-Hamawi proceeds to trace this lineage back to Adnan.[1] Hence, Jassas is from the Banu Bakr and belongs to the Banu Shayban division of the tribe. Additionally, Jassas' descent from Adnan confirms that he is not only amongst the Adnanites, but also a descendant of the biblical patriarch Ishmael.[2]
Jassas' sister, Jalilah bint Murrah, was married to Kulaib ibn Rabiah hence making him the brother-in-law of Kulaib.[3] Jassas' nephew from Kulaib and Jalilah's marriage was al-Jarw ibn Kulaib.[4] His maternal aunt was Al-Basus, who was the same woman whom incited him to kill Kulaib which started the 40-ye