Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Fadlallah was known for his relatively liberal views on women, whom he saw as equal to men. [46] He believed that women have just as much of a responsibility towards society as men do, and women should be role models for both men and women. Fadlallah also believed that women have the same exact ability as men to fight their inner weaknesses.
On 8 March 1985, a car bomb exploded between 9 [3] and 45 metres [4] from the house of Shia cleric Sayyed Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah in Beirut, Lebanon, in a failed assassination attempt by a Lebanese counter-terrorism unit linked to the Central Intelligence Agency. [2] The bombing killed 80 people and injured 200, almost all civilians. [1] [3]
Muhammad Hussein Fadlallah (also Muhammad Husayn Fadl-Allāh or Sayyed Muhammad Hussein Fadl-Allāh) (born 1935) – prominent Lebanese Twelver Shi'a Muslim cleric [3] Hussein el-Husseini – former speaker of the Lebanese Parliament, co-founder of the Amal Movement, fathered the Taif Agreement that led to the end of the Lebanese Civil War
Sayyid Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah السيد محمد حسين فضل الله 16 November 1935 4 July 2010 (aged 74) Najaf, Kingdom of Iraq: Beirut, Lebanon: Official Website: 36 Sayyid Abbas Hosseini Kashani السید عباس حسيني کاشانی: 1931 () 18 July 2010 (aged 78–79) Karbala, Mandatory Iraq: Iran
Muhammad Adil Khan (1957–2020) Muhammad Hanif Nadvi (1908–1987) Muhammad Ilyas Attar Qadri (born 1950) Muhammad Rafi Usmani (1936–2022) Muhammad Raza Saqib Mustafai (born 1972) Muhammad Taqi Usmani (born 1949) Muneeb-ur-Rehman (born 1945) Nizamuddin Shamzai (1952– 2004) Rasheed Turabi (1908–1973) Shah Ahmad Noorani (1926–2003)
The Sayyid brothers were Syed Hassan Ali Khan Barha and Syed Hussain Ali Khan, two powerful Mughal nobles during the decline of the empire.. They were Indian Muslims belonging to the Sadaat-e-Bara clan of the Barha dynasty, who claimed to be Sayyids or the descendants of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. [1]
Mughniyeh temporarily left Fatah in 1981 due to differences of opinion on the regime of Saddam Hussein. Mughniyeh, a religious Shiite, was upset by the murder of the Iraqi Grand Ayatollah Muhammad Baqir as-Sadr in 1980 as well as a previous attempt by the Iraqi intelligence on the life of Lebanese Ayatollah Muhammad Hussein Fadlallah. [23]
The spread of Shia Islam in Lebanon was a complex phenomenon over multiple centuries. [11] [12] Information regarding Jabal Amel's population prior to the Muslim conquest is insufficient, though it included a substantial tribal segment prior to the Muslim conquest represented by the Banu Amila who formed part of the Nabataean foederati of the Romans, [13] [14] [15] and affiliates of the ...