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Atiyah Abd al-Rahman is thought [6] to be the "Atiyah" who wrote a commanding letter [7] to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi in December 2005. The State Department announcement [citation needed] said that Abd Al Rahman: Was a Libyan in his late 30s. Was based in Iran, representing al-Qaeda to other Islamist terrorist groups. Was appointed to that role by ...
Attiya Al-Qahtani (born 1953), Saudi Arabian runner; Mullah Attiya al-Jamri (1899–1981), Bahraini khatib and poet; Shuhdi Atiya ash-Shafi (died 1960), Egyptian communist theoretician and activist; Atiyah Abd al-Rahman (1970–2011), Libyan purported to be a member of al-Qaeda and related militant groups
Abd al-Rahman was the son of Mu'awiya, son of Hisham, son of Abd al-Malik, according to Abd el-Wahid Merrakechi when reciting his ancestry. [34] Abd al-Rahman's mother was a member of the Nafza Berbers with whom he found refuge after the murder of his family in 750. [35] Abd al-Rahman married a Spanish Sephardi woman named Hulal.
An aged supporter of rebels and a Shia notable of the time, a disciple of the companion of Muhammad Jabir ibn Abd Allah al-Ansari and a famous narrator of Hadith, [2] Atiyya ibn Sa'd Awfi was arrested by Muhammad bin Qasim on the orders of Al-Hajjaj and demanded that he curse Ali on the threat of punishment. Atiyya refused to curse Ali and was ...
Mohammed Uthman al-Mirghani al-Khatim, founder of the Khatmiyya path in Sudan and Eritrea. [9] Mowlana Abd al-Rahman Nurow. A Somali disciple of ibn Idris who spread the Tariqa Muhammadiyya in Somalia. [11] Abu'l 'Abbas Al Dandarawi, Egyptian Sufi and founder of the Dandarawiyya path in Saudi Arabia. [9] Salih al-Ja'fari. He edited and ...
Abdul Rahman bin Hamad Al Attiyah (Arabic: عبد الرحمن بن حمد العطية; born 15 April 1950) is a Qatari diplomat who served as the fourth secretary general of the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).
Abdul Qadir Gilani (Persian: عبدالقادر گیلانی, romanized: 'Abdulqādir Gīlānī, Arabic: عبد القادر الجيلاني, romanized: ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Jīlānī) was a Hanbali scholar, preacher, and Sufi leader who was the eponym of the Qadiriyya, one of the oldest Sufi orders.
Abū ‘Abdir-Raḥmān As-Sulamī is thought to have died in either AH 73 (692/693 CE) or AH 74 (693/694 CE), in Bishr ibn Marwān province in Al-Kūfah. [ 1 ] Abū ‘Abdir-Raḥmān was known to have discussed the Qur’ān with Tajwīd , an ability he gained from ‘Uthmān , ‘Alī , Zaid ibn Thābit , Abdullāh ibn Mas‘ūd , and Ubayy ...