Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Ahmed Zabana (Arabic: أحمد زبانة; real name: Ahmed Zahana; 1926 – June 19, 1956) was an Algerian fighter who participated in the outbreak of the Algerian War. He was executed by guillotine by French regime colonizers on June 19, 1956, in Algiers .
Hors-la-loi: Rachid Bouchareb: Crime, Drama, War. Sétif and Guelma massacre, Paris massacre of 1961: 2012 Algeria Zabana! زبانة: Saïd Ould Khelifa Drama, History, War. Ahmed Zabana: 2012 France What the Day Owes the Night: Ce que le jour doit à la nuit: Alexandre Arcady: Drama, Romance. 2014 Algeria Twilight of Shadows: غروب ...
Harem de madame Osmane, Le (1993) Hassan terro (1967) Histoire Off 1983 Hamid Benamra; Histoire d'une rencontre (1985) Histoires de la révolution (1969) Honneur de la tribu, L' (1993) Hors-la-loi, Les (1968) hors la loi (2009) How Big Is Your Love (2011) Héritage, L' (1975), also known as Legacy, The (1975) HIZAM Hamid Benamra 2016 Festival ...
Zabana! ( Arabic : زبانة ) is a 2012 Algerian drama film directed by Saïd Ould Khelifa . [ 1 ] The film was selected as the Algerian entry for the Best Foreign Language Oscar at the 85th Academy Awards , but it did not make the final shortlist.
The Ahmed Zabana National Museum (Arabic: المتحف الوطني أحمد زبانة, El-mathaf El-ouatani Ahmed Zabana) is a museum located in Oran, Algeria, and named after the Algerian national hero Ahmed Zabana who was executed by the French on May 19, 1956, in Algiers.
The album features two covers two songs by the Algerian artist Blaoui Houari; "Zabana" and "Papa". [6] Zabana is a tribute to Ahmed Zabana , the first man to be executed by the French in Oran during the Algerian War of Independence ; [ 6 ] [ 8 ] whereas "Papa" is a tribute to the memory of his late father and was co-written with French musician ...
On 19 June 1956, a month after the ambush, two "rebels" condemned to death were executed, Ahmed Zabana and Abdelkader Ferradj. The choice of Zabana can easily be explained by his important role in the Algerian independence movement, but that of Ferradj seems to only be explained by his membership in the Ali Khodja commando group; he was accused ...
Larbi Ben M'hidi in the 1930s with his friends (Larbi is in the middle) Larbi Ben M'hidi was born sometime in 1923 to a marabout family descended from the Arab tribe of Ouled Derradj [7] in the village of El Kouahi, Ain M'lila, which was part of the Constantine department at the time.