Thursday, December 30, 2010

Israel Katsav to face rape charge "I am innocent .. I did not Do it"


http://english.aljazeera.net/news/middleeast/2009/03/200938145019459181.html

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Turkey's President Abdullah Gul's wife Hayrunnisa Gul and Pakistani Prime Minister Wife

الرءيس التركي  عبدالله جول وزوجته وابنته وزوجها وطيب أردوغان وزوجته في صوره توضح كيف كافح الأتراك في عوده الحجاب الي الحياه بعد ان عمل اليهودي اتاتورك علي محاربه الاسلام بعد ان تم تنصيبه من الصهيونيه العالميه


Born: Hayrünnisa Özyurt
August 18, 1965 (age 46), Istanbul
Spouse: Abdullah Gül (m. 1980)
Children: Ahmed Münir, Mehmed Emre and Kübra


Turkey's President Abdullah Gul's wife Hayrunnisa Gul (R) and Pakistani Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani's wife Fauzia Gilani arrive for a ceremony at the Presidential Palace in Ankara December 7, 2010.

 

Friday, November 19, 2010

The Restaurant un-Welcomed Guest


The driver of a van that crashed into LaRoe's restaurant sits at a booth (l.) looking at his van in Grand Rapids, Ohio. According to Wood County Sheriff Mark Wasylyshyn, the van and another vehicle were involved in a traffic crash along Front Street near the restaurant. The van driver, an 84-year-old man from Paulding County, subsequently drove into the restaurant. No injuries were reported.

General Motors Revival November 2010


The offering, which raised $23.1 billion, is bigger and more ambitious than had once seemed possible. But the recently bankrupt automaker will have to build on its revival for the government to recoup its entire $50 billion investment and validate the Obama administration’s decision to keep G.M. from collapsing.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Funny Video about the Tennessee Mosque

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UNGvmP70ROs&feature=related

Laurie Cardoza-Moore a Fanatic anti-Muslims and anti-Islam Rubble Rouser

Or the "Middle Tennesseans Tired of Being Represented By Shitty Rednecks in the National Media Defense Fund." Those are the working names for an idea I had this morning. I've been watching the Daily Show clip featuring local opportunistic bigot anti-mosque activist Laurie Cardoza-Moore pretty steadily for three or four days now, trying to find some kind of weakness. Obviously her disgusting ignorance isn't doing the trick. Let's be honest, where hate inflammation is concerned, that's really more of a strength.

Then it occurred to me. The Cardoza-Moores of the world, and the wackos and media whores who succeed them, are like lichens or tumors. Or perhaps the proper analogy is some kind of tick. She survives as long as she can hate-suck the teat of Islamic resentment in Middle Tennessee. She won't go away unless the Muslims who have every right to live and worship here go away.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2A5reoBMS8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sr7-Qx_2YzQ&feature=related

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Miracle of Islam 5 Years Old Shaikh Sharifudin Khalifa of Tanzania

Miracle of Islam 5 Years Old Shaikh Sharifudin Khalifa
There are orphans and street children everywhere. So much so that the sight of another small child standing on a street corner hardly merits a second glance.

But only when a boy opens his mouth to speak do onlookers realize that Sharifudin is special. The five-years-old speaks in five languages - English, French, Italian, Swahili and Arabic - even though he is completely uneducated.

Shariff is a preacher who draws crowds of thousand in Kenya to his increasingly regular sermons. The Lybian leader, Colonel Muammar Al-Gaddafi, is a great supporter following an audience with him earlier this year.
Last week was a milestone for the child introduced to gawping throngs as the "Miracle Boy" of East Africa. He smiled triumphantly when told he had notched up his one thousand conversion to Islam in a country where Muslims are a minority.

Tours of France and Britain now beckon, according to Haji Maroulin, one of the boy's four guardians. He will travel as a missionary on a trip to be financed by a businessman from the Ivory Coast.

"When he is not preaching he is just like any other kid," Haji Maroulin said. "But when he preaches he changes.

At one year old he was able to recite the Quran and went on to be able to preach in Arabic, Swahili and French without any learning. The number of his converts is growing daily."
For a child he has strangely adult mannerism. He speaks confidently, mainly in Swahili unless he is delivering a sermon. Then, he fixed his piercing brown eyes on the person he is addressing without inhibition.

His squeaky child-like voice mesmerizes audiences.
According to Haji Maroulin, Shariff was born into Swahili-speaking Catholic family in Arusha, north Tanzania, in December 1993: "At the age of two months he refused to suckle his mother's milk and at the age of four months he started reciting verses from the Holy Quran."
The boy's first words - "You people repent and you will be accepted by God" were in Arabic. He concerned parents believed him to be disturbed by "demons" and called pastors to pray for the baby.

Eventually Muslim neighbors interpreted their son's alien speech and his parents later converted to Islam themselves. Although his father died in 1997, his mother remains in Tanzania while her worldly son continues his travel.

There is no doubting his pulling-power and in a commercial world his entourage has been quick to produce videos of the high-pitched sermons. He has also been deemed genuine by Kenya's Muslim World League.

Kaplich Barsito, 35, from Nairobi, saw Shariff in action addressing a crowd of more than 1,000 in an open area of the Pumwani districts of Kenya's capital, and is in no doubt of the boy's abilities.

"He was like a politician, very confident," he said. He seemed as though he would have been disappointed if there had been less people.

The power went off and his minders wanted him to stop, but he grabbed the loud-speaker and carried on in Swahili, English and Arabic. It was very impressive and he mesmerized the audience with a focused sermon."

Shariff himself seemed mystified about his powers. He said last week that he picked up languages as soon as he heard. "I went to Congo and heard people speaking Lingala (the local language). I just was able to start speaking it."

He was born in December 1993
http://www.iluvislam.com/v1/readarticle.php?article_id=346
Posted by 100 Blogs Attached at 8:30 PM
Labels: Miracle Islam Years Old Shaikh Sharifudin Khalifa Africa 6 comments:
yaweluck said...
ASALAMU ALEYKUM, I JUST WONDER WHY THEIR IS NO NEW VIDEO OR PICTURES OF SHEIKH SHARIF, YOU NO THIS DAYS EVERYONE CARY MOBILE PHONES. I ONLY SEE SAME VIDEO ON YOUTUBE AND ETHER WEBSITE.

THANK YOU

April 24, 2009 11:18 AM
Anonymous said...
Asslam-o-Alikum brothers,

It is a piety in this tech era, Muslim are lazy on updating other Muslim brothers about such Miracles. I live in Afghanistan. Just found few days ago about this 5 years old Sheikh Mushraffudin Alkhalifa. I distributed the video clip of the Sheikh to as much as friends and relatives that I have.

I request the PEACE TV to find this Sheikh and have some interviews with him. We Afghans educated youths regularly watch this nice and informative channel. May Allah reward Dr. Zakir Naik. He is the apple of our eyes.

May peace by upon you all,

Ebadullah

July 28, 2009 4:20 AM
Anonymous said...
ASLAAM,

THIS IS A GOOD SUGGEST FROM OUR AFGHAN BROTHER. PEACE TV AND OTHER ISLAMIC CHANNEL SHOULD MEET THE SHEIKH.

WA SALAM
ALI SOHAIL

July 28, 2009 4:24 AM

Stock Market Investors Terms

http://www.investorglossary.com/

Top Stock Brokers

http://www.dogsofthedow.com/tdbrokers.htm

Sheikh Sharifuddin Khalifa "the miracle boy of Africa..."

http://bonjourplanetearth.blogspot.com/2009/05/sheikh-sharifuddin-khalifa-miracle-boy.html

Friday, November 12, 2010

Christine O'Donnell Moment of Happiness

American Motherhood Data November 2010


First, the bad news: 1 in 4 women who had a baby between June 2007 and June 2008 were living in poverty, according to the most recent Census figures. Then, the not-so-bad news: of the 1.5 million unmarried mothers who gave birth that year, a quarter were actually cohabiting with a partner, so perhaps they weren't exactly "single" moms. And last, the could-go-either-way news: the percentage of working women who gave birth grew between 2007 and 2008, from 57% to 61%.

These findings are contained in the latest report from the Census Bureau, Fertility of American Women: 2008, which also found that between June 2007 and June 2008, about 4 million American women aged 15 to 44 gave birth. Fertility data are collected every two years, but this is the first report to publish cohabitation data. (More on Time.com: 5 Pregnancy Taboos Explained (or Debunked))

http://healthland.time.com/2010/11/05/the-latest-figures-on-american-motherhood/#ixzz1566BrHzv
http://gizmodo.com/

Morocco Common Derjah Words and Flag


A few common words in Moroccan Arabic

Yes = na’am/lyyeh
No = la
Thank you = choukran, barak el-lah fik
Okay = ouakha
Please = min fadlak / afak
Goodbye = be-slama
Good morning = sebah-el-kheir
Excuse me = smeh-li

How much is that? = chhal / chhal el-tamane



Ariel Sharon Comatose

Columnist Jonah Goldberg the Voice of Right Wing Extremism


Last year, when asked if he believed in American exceptionalism, President Obama responded, "I believe in American exceptionalism, just as I suspect that the Brits believe in British exceptionalism and the Greeks believe in Greek exceptionalism."
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-goldberg-exceptionalism-20101109,0,263343.column
November 9, 2010

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Al Jadida Mazagan Doukkala Morocco

Situated in the agricultural province of Doukkala , Mazagan was founded by the Portuguese who built a fort in 1502 and expanded the enclosure to its present dimensions. The water cistern was built around the same time and was not discovered till 1916 when a grocer next door tried to expand his store and found it still half-full with water. Mazagan withstood the Saadian siege of 1562 and all assaults until it fell to the Alawite sultan, Sidi Mohammed ben Abdellah, in 1769. The Portuguese escaped the siege by sea and may have blown up a tower on their way out (one out of five is missing). The captured town was renamed Al Jadida (The New) in 1815 and the enclosure turned into a Jewish quarter ( mellah ) . French colonials rebaptized the town Mazagan after 1912, but Moroccan renamed it again Al Jadida after independence in 1956. By that time, the Jews were departing for Europe and Israel . The town has the only five-sided minaret in the Islamic world and parts of Orson Welles' Othello were filmed in the cistern. Al Jadida is now a summer and weekend resort for the Casawi (residents of Casablanca ) middle class and is a thriving economic center.

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

George W Bush Humorous Video

http://www.perrspectives.com/blog/

Howard Carter and King Tut Amun Tomb Discovery in Valley of Kings Egypt







http://www.crystalinks.com/tutstomb.html

NY museum to return Tut relics back home: Egypt a Wrong Approach

It is totally disgusting such Hawas fanaticism. These foreign museums have million of visitors and Egyptian sections which displays prominently such artifacts.
These museum visitors deserve to see such artifacts without going to Egypt.
The return of such artifacts are crimes against these museum visitors.
Shame on fanatic Hawas. He is very disgusting.
http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2010/11/10/125606.html

Monday, November 8, 2010

India Heated Debate Five American Reporters or Eight? You Got it Toyota Eight


"Gibbs announced loudly and persistently on steps of Hyderabad House that he would pull" President Obama out of the meeting "unless 'the White House 8,' as we've come to be known, were all allowed in."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_upshot/20101108/pl_yblog_upshot/gibbs-threatens-to-pull-obama-after-press-dispute

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Obama Arabic Song Dance

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8VlzcPCR1LE&feature=related

TV Number Statistics

http://tvbythenumbers.com/2010/
Keith Olbermann To Be Back On The Air Tuesday Night For MSNBC

US Census Statistics 2009

People QuickFacts USA

Population, 2009 estimate 307,006,550

Population, percent change, April 1, 2000 to July 1, 2009 9.1%

Population estimates base (April 1) 2000 281,424,602

Persons under 5 years old, percent, 2009 6.9%

Persons under 18 years old, percent, 2009 24.3%

Persons 65 years old and over, percent, 2009 12.9%

Female persons, percent, 2009 50.7%
http://quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/00000.html

Indian Elephant Festival in Kerala


This Picture was taken at Thrissur Elephant festival at Kerala.
This festival of elephant is celebrated during the month of April and May .In the procession the tuskers are used .Thrissur city of Kerala is known for this festival.Even though it attracts huge number of tourists and local people.It is not very elephant friendly,Because of decorations which is very unnatural for the elephants,The heat and the crowd.

The Indian Army Marching Wearing Red Peacock Cap Photo


Indian Army Marching Wearing Red Peacock Cap Photo

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Democrat Keith Ellison a Muslim US House Representative Re-Elected

DFL's Ellison re-elected in 5th District MINNEAPOLIS — Democrat Keith Ellison has defeated Republican Joel Demos to win a third term in his Minneapolis-area congressional district.

Ellison drew national attention in 2006 when he became the first Muslim elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. He is also Minnesota's first and so far only black member of Congress.

Ellison beat Demos and the Independence Party's Tom Schrunk in the Democratic-dominated district.
http://www.postbulletin.com/newsmanager/templates/localnews_story.asp?z=42&a=477025

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Deceased candidate Oropeza, 53, wins state Senate seat in California


Oropeza, 53, died two weeks before the election from a blood clot after battling cancer. But the incumbent remained on the ballot, winning by a decent margin – 58 percent to 36 percent over Republican John Stammreich.
http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2010/11/03/deceased-candidate-wins-state-senate-seat-in-california/

Monday, November 1, 2010

Turkey Scarf Ban

Mt Merapi Eruption




YOGYAKARTA, Nov 1 – Mt Merapi erupted again today spewing clouds of volcanic ash causing panic among vilagers in Yogyakarta and Central Java provinces. Indonesian volcanologists said the eruption at 10.30am was not as strong as the one on October 26 that killed 38 people. The Malaysian Students Department (MSD) in Indonesia said the some 500

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Paris Hilton in Halloween Customs



Lauren Booth Sister of Britain Prime Minister Wife Journey to Islam



Lauren Booth embraces Islam
The New York Times


TEHRAN (Press TV) -- Tony Blair's sister-in-law Lauren Booth has embraced Islam, saying she was inspired by a visit to the Holy Shrine of Fatima Masoumeh (SA) in Qom, Iran.


“It was a Tuesday evening, and I sat down and felt this shot of spiritual morphine, just absolute bliss and joy,” Booth told the British daily The Mail.

The 43-year-old half sister of Cherie Blair now wears hijab whenever she leaves her home, prays five times a day, and visits her local mosque.

“Now I don't eat pork, and I read the Quran every day. I'm on page 60. I also haven't had a drink in 45 days, the longest period in 25 years,” she added.

“The strange thing is that since I decided to convert I haven't wanted to touch alcohol, and I was someone who craved a glass of wine or two at the end of a day.”

Booth, who works for Iran's English-language Press TV news network, decided to embrace Islam six weeks ago and converted immediately after she returned to Britain.

Booth did not refuse the possibility of wearing a burqa and said, “Who knows where my spiritual journey will take me?”

Before her spiritual experience in Iran, Booth had spent considerable time working in Palestine and was “always impressed with the strength and comfort it (Islam) gave.”

She travelled to Gaza in August 2008 along with 46 other activists to highlight Israel's blockade of the territory and was subsequently refused entry into both Israel and Egypt.

In a public letter she wrote to Tony Blair during her visit to Iran last month, Booth expressed hope that the former Labour Party politician would change his presumptions about Islam.

“Your world view is that Muslims are mad, bad, dangerous to know,” she wrote in her letter, and asked Blair to acknowledge International Quds Day, an annual event on the last Friday of the holy month of Ramadan when Muslims express solidarity with the Palestinian people and protest Israel's occupation of Beit-ul-Moqaddas (Jerusalem).

“Here in Iran they feel proud to suffer in order to express solidarity with the people of Palestine,” she said.

“It's kind of like the way you express solidarity with America only without illegal chemical weapons and a million civilian deaths,” she wrote in the letter to Blair.

Booth moved to France with her husband and two daughters in 2004 but returned to Britain after her husband suffered a sever brain injury following a motorcycle accident in April 2009.

Egypt Visa

http://www.timaticweb.com/cgi-bin/tim_website_client.cgi?SpecData=1&VISA=&HEALTH=&page=both&NA=SG&AR=00&DE=EG&VT=SG&EM=SG&PASSTYPES=PASS&user=SKYWEB&subuser=SKYWEB1
http://travel.state.gov/visa/bulletin/bulletin_3236.html
http://www.smtegypttours.com/

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Barack Obama Cabinet


In order of succession to the Presidency:

Vice President of the United States
Joseph R. Biden

Department of State
Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton
http://www.state.gov

Department of the Treasury
Secretary Timothy F. Geithner
http://www.treasury.gov

Department of Defense
Secretary Robert M. Gates
http://www.defenselink.mil

Department of Justice
Attorney General Eric H. Holder, Jr.
http://www.usdoj.gov

Department of the Interior
Secretary Kenneth L. Salazar
http://www.doi.gov

Department of Agriculture
Secretary Thomas J. Vilsack
http://www.usda.gov

Department of Commerce
Secretary Gary F. Locke
http://www.commerce.gov

Department of Labor
Secretary Hilda L. Solis
http://www.dol.gov

Department of Health and Human Services
Secretary Kathleen Sebelius
http://www.hhs.gov

Department of Housing and Urban Development
Secretary Shaun L.S. Donovan
http://www.hud.gov

Department of Transportation
Secretary Ray LaHood
http://www.dot.gov

Department of Energy
Secretary Steven Chu
http://www.energy.gov

Department of Education
Secretary Arne Duncan
http://www.ed.gov

Department of Veterans Affairs
Secretary Eric K. Shinseki
http://www.va.gov

Department of Homeland Security
Secretary Janet A. Napolitano
http://www.dhs.gov

The following positions have the status of Cabinet-rank:

White House Chief of Staff
Rahm I. Emanuel

Environmental Protection Agency
Administrator Lisa P. Jackson
http://www.epa.gov

Office of Management & Budget
Jeffrey Zients, Acting Director
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb

United States Trade Representative
Ambassador Ronald Kirk
http://www.ustr.gov

United States Ambassador to the United Nations
Ambassador Susan Rice
http://www.usunnewyork.usmission.gov/

Council of Economic Advisers
Chairman Austan Goolsbee
http://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/eop/cea/
http://www.whitehouse.gov/administration/cabinet/

Friday, October 29, 2010

Istiqlal Mosque Indonesia



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Istiqlal_Mosque

Hayrunnisa Gul The Turkish President Wife with Queen of Britain


Hayrunnisa Gul was once denied enrolment at a university because she wore a headscarf.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-11652750




sherifview Greater Los Angeles Map

Interesting Entertaining Video

http://yanswersblog.com/index.php/archives/2010/10/28/yahoo-answers-hits-the-streets-episode-9/

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Classic Arabic Video Songs


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BkzaywDAvWo&feature=related
ناظم الغزالي -عيرتني بالشيب
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4CJ5H_uepjk
music
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jv3v0A8hMn8&feature=related
Fareed El Atrash Ahwak ...
ليلى مراد احنا الاتنين
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRjotSZzitU&feature=related
شيماء هلالي هناء الادريسي - نسم علينا الهوا
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1KDuhxvHpE&feature=related

Harrar Ethiopia





http://mapcarta.com/Harar

http://www.mapquest.com/maps?city=Harar&country=ET

http://search.yahoo.com/search?fr=mcafee&type=A211US0&p=HARAR+MAP






Harar is one of the principal tourist destinations along the famous historical route through Ethiopia. It is located in South Eastern Ethiopia about 526 km from Addis Abeba and is among those cities in Africa that enjoy a mild climate throughout the year, which makes it immediately attractive to the contemporary tourist. The well-known 19 th century traveller, Sir Richard Burton, who was the first European visitor to enter what he called the “forbidden city”, left us a vivid picture of his memorable ten days:
“The ancient metropolis of a once mighty race, the only permanent settlement in Eastern Africa, the reported seat of Muslim learning, a walled city of stone houses possessing its independent chief, its peculiar population, its unknown language and its own coinage; the emporium of the coffee trade and the head quarters of the slave trade and the great manufacture of cotton cloths, amply it appeared deserved the trouble of exploration.”
Perched on a gentle hill, drained by a network of rivers, still Harar is, to all appearances, an ancient walled city. It was founded a millennium ago, between the 7 th and 9 th century, by Semitic-speaking people. At least seven settlements are mentioned as the precursors of Harar according to a popular legend. These were Esshkani gey, Fereka gey, Hararwe gey, Hassen gey, Ruhuk gey, Sammit gey and Tuhkun gey. All these sites are now awaiting archaeological excavation, exept Hassen gey, which still keeps the name north of Harar. These settlements resolved their enmity and agreed to establish their centre in Harar.
Despite this legend related to the foundation of Harar, however, Sheikh Abadir, the “patron of the city”, comes first when the name Harar is mentioned. He is said to come with his entourage in the 10 th century from Arabia. It is believed that he was the one who organized the administrative system of the city and also gave Harar its name. With its 82 Mosques and uncountable shrines, the walled city of Harar is considered the “4 th holiest city of Islam”, after Mecca, Medina and Jerusalem. Moreover, it is referred to as “madinat al-awliya”, the city of saints, due to its density of saintly places, which protect the city from unknown evils.
Harar had fertile soil with abundant water to establish a sustainable effective and efficient agriculture system. Using terracing and irrigation as well as intercropping, which are useful for tropical soil and a symbiotically correct practice, the Harari farmers were able to produce grain and cash crops in adequate supplies for local consumption and export. It is considered as the original domestic centre of the world famous “Coffee Arabica” and the mild stimulant leaf called chat (catha adulis). Both are lucrative export items, which provide the Ethiopian economy with substantial financial resources. Both are also consumed socially and are a binding force for social peace and coherence. Due to its altitude Harar was being free from the common tropical diseases, such as malaria, which are rampant in the surrounding lowland, and still, Harar is safe from mosquito attacks.
Harar was not dependent exclusively on agriculture, but also benefited from caravan trade, since it was geographically an entrepot of extensive trade between the Red Sea and the vast Ethiopian hinterland. To facilitate the international trade of those days, Harar had to mint its own coinage. In the whole of the Ethiopian region, it was the second centre after Axum to produce coins.
This broad and stable economic base helped Harar to become one of the leading centres of learning in the Horn of Africa and to develop a unique urban culture which was uninterrupted through centuries. The shift of the capital city of Adal state from Dakar to the city of Harar in 1520 brought about the heyday of Harar. The new capital became the springboard for Imam Ahmed, commonly known as Gragn, the left-handed, to incorporate the Horn of Africa. However, the leading role of Harar did not last long. After the wars of Gragn, Harar was exposed to frequent attacks from different sides.
Emir Nur built the remarkable defensive wall popularly known as jugal. This wall warmly engulfs the city which is confined within 48 hectares and 362 narrow lanes. The wall encircles the city with five traditional gates, which are named according to vicinities of the surrounding tribes. These gates are Asmadin Beri, Asum Beri, Argob Beri, Bedro Beri and Suqutat Beri and they demarcate the administrative as well as the socio-zones of the old city. The attentive observer will find many holes, penetrating the wall. They are called waraba nudule, holes of the hyena, since their purpose is not only to let the rainwater getting out of the city, but they are used by the hyenas to enter Harar by night and clean it from any litter. The wall gives a sense of direction and belonging to the Harari. It defines the major cultural texture of the holistic fabric of the Harari. The wall continues to be of great significance to the city dwellers, since without it the link with the social and cultural environment would be missing.
After its heyday as the centre of the mighty Adal state, Harar gradually declined and became a small city-state ruled by the Ibn Dawd dynasty from 1647-1875. The occupying force of Egypt interrupted the rule of the dynasty between 1875 and 1885. The gates that had been closed to European travellers were wide open during the Egyptian occupation. The last Amir Abdullahi took over the mantle of power for less than two years, but was defeated by Menelik at the battle of Chellenqo in 1887.
Thereafter Harar was incorporated into greater Ethiopia, which was then in the process of formation. Although it lost its independence, Harar remained one of the most important economic centres of the new state under Emperor Menelik. During the Italian Fascist invasion and occupation in 1935, Harar expanded greatly and is now quite often referred as “the greater Harar”. The Italians destroyed the western farmland and established their administrative headquarters, called Botega, without affecting the old city. Today Harar is the administrative centre of the smallest regional state, the Harari Peoples National Regional State and home to many different nationalities.
Harar evolved its own, unique social organisation based on Ahlil (kinship), marignat/ ghelnat (male/ female friendship) and afocha (community association). This social organisation of Harar is governed by gey ada, the culture of Harar, and communicated through a unique language known as gey sinan, the language of the city. The hala mahal, or etiquette of the city, is a binding force which enhances the urban culture.
Most of all Harari women play an indispensable role in the survival of Harari identity. Their socio-economic dynamics are immeasurable. They dominate the market scene. They give a lively atmosphere to major social occasions such as weddings and mourning and many other ritual practices. They also shoulder the responsibility of the preservation of the colourful traditional costume and the making of the city’s renowned basketry. There can be few places better known for the quality of baskets. Basketry plays a major role in Harari society. Basket making is taught in their early years so that girls will know basic city etiquette while learning, at the same time, how to stitch a coil of grass to produce a very intricate basket for different social functions. Generally there are about 20 types and different sizes for different purposes: they have social functions as well serve as wall decoration, where every type has its own specific place. There are several production centres recently established by women associations. Tourists can visit some of these centres and observe the production techniques of these world famous Harari baskets.
Within easy walking distance one can transcend both space and time, to travel into a medieval reality of winding narrow lanes with an abundance of mosques and shrines which perpetually enchant its visitor as well its residents. In contrast, wide asphalt roads and concrete buildings characterize the modern quarter. To start with, the walled city is a talking mirror that reflects the images of the past as well of the contemporary city. Within easy distance many attracting sites could be discovered to quench the thirst of the curious tourists.
Within the wall you may be first arrive at faraz megala, the old horse market, where you face the imposing octagonal Cathedral of Mehane Alem, which contains a gallery of traditional religious works. From the central place in Harar you can reach the central market, through mäkina girgir, a busy historical street, which got its name from the sirring sound of numerous sewing machines. On your way you pass by gey hamburti, the navel of the city, where according to the legend Amir Nur got his inspiration to build the wall. Reaching the market in the centre of the city, gidir megala, you are confronted with its colourful customers mainly from the rural surroundings during the afternoon. From this central place you have all choices to continue your stroll in every direction of the five gates.
Going back mäkina girgir, and turning a right alley you will find the house of Ras Tafari, the later Emperor Haile Selassie who was raised in Harar and build this house during his reign. Nearby the Rimbeau Museum is situated, a house dedicated to the famous French poet Arthur Rimbeau, who lived in Harar, for 10 years between 1881 to 1891. The museum serves as a centre of documentation, craft work, for exhibitions and for teaching the French language. It displays a collection of old photographs and has a huge collection of research papers about Harar.
Following a lane to the north you will face the central Jugla Hospital. From here you may take the road down to Assumberi where the shrine of Amir Nur is located, a Harari leader who reigned between 1551 and 1567 A.D. and is well known for the building of the wall. Going back in the direction to faraz megala is the Regional Museum inside the main building of the Regional Bureau of Culture. Here we encounter general items from the older and larger administrative region of Harar.
From the Regional Museum take a walk to the gate of Argob Beri, where are you encountering the two white washed minarets of the Friday Mosque. Just behind to the left a coffee factory is to be found, where you could purchase fresh coffee. Close by you find the Catholic Church of the French Capuchin Mission. Going back to the main road further down, you come across the Ada Gar or cultural house, a Harari Community Museum dealing with a typical Harari household lifestyle. The main building, especially the living room with the five raised platforms and basket work and wooden bowls has a lot to tell. Each and every corner, including the different niches, can be associated with social and symbolic functions.
Passing further down, on the left side another mosque is located named Din Agobani, after a big stone, which was formerly known as a strategically observation place for the surrounding of Harar. Similarly, you will be astonished by the picturesque panorama of the countryside.
Coming to the gate of Argob Beri, you will face one of the biggest markets for chat in Harar. Following the road outside the wall you pass by a shrine, where a spectacular performance takes place, a special particularity of Harar, the feeding of the hyenas. These wild animals, which are known as scavengers of the city but could easily be taken as domesticated animals, are subjects of many legends concerning the old relationship between humankind and the animal. The feeding is performed every evening outside the wall. To attend it is an experience that binds the attendance with Harar forever.
Continuing your walk around the wall you will soon face Suqutat Beri, which historical gate is still existent besides the main entrance. Climbing up the asphalt road, on the left you will find the house of Abdallah Sharif, who runs a private museum, rich in many archaeological, historical and anthropological items, carrying the heritage of the city and it’s surrounding. His major treasure is his collection of old handwritten books, which he also repairs by traditional methods of Harari bookbinding. Continuing ascending to the central market you may take the left lane to loose yourself in the labyrinth of valley of Suqutat Beri and Bedro Beri. Reaching the wall again you may discover the shrine of Abadir, the founder, patron and 2 nd Amir of Harar.

Coming back to the central market, you may come across the reconciliation lane, margarraw wiger, which got its name, because it is so narrow, that two passers-by have to touch each other. Otherwise you may visit the manufacturing centre of traditional silverware within the market, which produces necklaces, earrings and other items of interest.
Moreover, fascinating spots could be visited outside the wall. You may visit the traditional stone villages of the Argobba people, Kurumi and Umardin, which are located 25 km away from Harar. On your way you pass by the shrine of Aw Sofi, where under a tree the first Coranic School was established, as well as further.



http://harartur.harardigital.com/index.html

Sunday, October 24, 2010

Hoda Kotb Star of NBC Morning Program



Kathie Lee and Hoda

Hoda Kotb is a correspondent on Dateline NBC. She is host of Your Total Health. She appears on NBC News.

She grew up in Morgantown, West Virginia, where being Egyptian–American, she says, had its ups and downs. It started on the first day at school each year, she recalls, when the teacher would come to her name and say, “And this next name is, well—a typo, I think!” But she also remembers kids asking her, “‘Have you ever seen the pyramids?’ And of course we had, every summer.”


COURTESY OF NBC

Each evening, her father, who taught at West Virginia University, would grill the family on the day’s news at the dinner table. “‘What’s happening with the Egyptians and Israelis today?’” he would ask. “We had to learn.”

At Virginia Tech University, Hoda studied political science and, drawn to the immediacy of television, broadcast journalism.

In 1986, she started anchoring, moving from Greenville, Mississippi to Moline, Illinois to Ft. Myers, Florida, then up to WWL-TV, the CBS affiliate in New Orleans. There, reporters helped decide what they covered, and for Kotb, that meant a story in Egypt. “I have a great aunt, Mufida Abdulrahman, one of the first women lawyers in Egypt. I interviewed her on the steps of the courthouse, bouncing down the stairs in her beret, people calling out to her. She was like a rock star, yet so well respected,” she recalls of her series. “Suddenly, I knew where I came from.”

In 1998, NBC hired her and moved her to New York. From there, she has covered many global stories. Arriving in Baghdad, she says, “I did not see 10,000 Saddam Husseins: I saw people who looked like my uncles and aunts. Others saw Iraqis as possible enemies: I saw them as family.”

Covering the aftermath of the 2004 tsunami, she recalls: “What blew me away about the tsunami was its magnitude. I remember being in the Thai countryside, sitting on a pile of, well, stuff. An old woman saw me and handed me an orange. She had nothing, and she handed me an orange.”

She won a 2002 Edward R. Murrow Award, a 2003 Gracie Award and a 2004 Headliner Award, but much of her success she credits to her heritage. “When you have a connection with a place, you see it through different eyes. The Arab world is a second home for me. Sometimes, when you have lived in a place, you talk about it much more knowledgeably.”
Hoda Kotb had no idea when she and Kathie Lee Gifford joined forces on the fourth hour of the "Today" show that they would become "Saturday Night Live" fodder. But Hoda, who notes she's happier than ever, says bring it on.




"Kath and I, when we started having cocktails on the air, knew it was fun, but we didn't know it was gong to explode into something," Hoda tells me on the set of my HDNet talk show, "Naughty But Nice With Rob." "With her, you never know. I don't know what she is going to say or do, and I live most of the show in terror, in fear that she will ask me about my divorce yet again."



But it's not just Hoda's work life that's skyrocketing. She has found a great guy, Jay, who despite being called her "imaginary boyfriend" on "SNL," is very real and maybe the one.



"He is a sweet guy," Hoda beams. "By the way, when 'SNL' was spoofing the fact that I have a pretend boyfriend, they can scratch my ass. He's a great guy. ... You know that, Rob."



And although Hoda thinks the folks on the 8th floor at the real 30 Rock have their parodies down pat, Kathie Lee has her own opinion of the spoof spots.



"One day they are spoofing the 'Today' show, and you look up and see someone that looks exactly like Kathie Lee, and Kathie goes, 'That's nothing like our show,' and I go, 'That's exactly like watching our show,'" Hoda laughs. "It's our show without changing the script. I always get a kick out of it. I laugh every time they do it."




Video
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/12/hoda-kotb-boyfriend-jay-snl-spoofs-today_n_1202947.html?icid=maing-grid7%7Cmain5%7Cdl2%7Csec3_lnk1%26pLid%3D127454

http://thestir.cafemom.com/entertainment/2896/kathie_lee_and_hoda_kotbhttp://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/200602/calling.helen.thomas.htm

Calgary’s Naheed Nenshi becomes Canada’s first Muslim



If you don't know the name Naheed Nenshi, take note.
A grassroots campaign driven by volunteers has delivered Canada its first Muslim mayor – Mr. Nenshi, who scored a staggering win in Calgary’s mayor’s race Monday.
He defeated two better-funded candidates, including one backed by Stephen Harper’s campaign team, and saw his support surge in the final few weeks. To say Mr. Nenshi's campaign was austere is understatement – he delivered his speech in a basement that was donated by a supporter at the last second.
The 38-year-old Mr. Nenshi survived a smear campaign and a telephone failure in the crucial final days and hours, before running away with what was to be a close vote. His candidacy was branded the “Purple Revolution,” named for his campaign colour and driven by a broad demographic that included strong youth support. He achieved what many observers thought impossible – a wonkish, even dorky, academic and visible minority elected to the helm of what is often called Canada's most conservative city after a campaign driven by charisma and sheer determination.
Nenshi was born in Toronto, Ontario, and raised in Calgary. His parents, Noorjah and Kurban, were immigrants to Canada from Tanzania, and he has a sister.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/prairies/naheed-nenshi-poised-to-take-calgarys-top-job/article1762765/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyZ0_6iF4kg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zWaewA2Rgis&feature=related
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1uVHsfjeOCk&feature=related