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  2. Majid Fandi Al-Mubaraki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Majid_Fandi_Al-Mubaraki

    Majid Fandi Al-Mubaraki (Arabic: ماجد فندي المباركي) is an Iraqi-Australian writer and researcher based in the Sydney metropolitan area. [1] He is known for his publications of Mandaic texts , including the Ginza Rabba and Qulasta .

  3. Qulasta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qulasta

    Majid Fandi Al-Mubaraki has published a two-volume set of Qulasta prayers containing the printed Mandaic text of the prayers. It was originally published in 1998 and 1999, and republished in 2010 as an electronic CD-ROM version. Volume 1 corresponds to Part 1 of Lidzbarski (1920), and Volume 2 partially corresponds to Part 2 (the "Oxford ...

  4. Mandaean priest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandaean_priest

    Al-Mubaraki, Majid Fandi (2020). Rijal al-dean al-Mandaean fee al-Qarn al-Hadi w al-Eshreen (The Mandaean priests in twenty first century) (in Arabic). Sydney.

  5. Rushuma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rushuma

    Below is the transliterated Mandaic text of the Rushuma prayer, based on Majid Fandi Al-Mubaraki's Qulasta (volume 2) [3] as edited by Matthew Morgenstern and Ohad Abudraham in the Comprehensive Aramaic Lexicon. [4] The English translation is original.

  6. Mandaean studies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mandaean_studies

    With the majority of Mandaeans living permanently in Anglophone countries (especially Australia and the United States) and Western Europe, members of the Mandaean diaspora, including Brikha Nasoraia, Carlos Gelbert, Majid Fandi Al-Mubaraki, Yuhana Nashmi, Qais Al-Saadi, Dakhil Shooshtary, and many other Mandaeans were publishing books and ...

  7. The Baptism of Hibil Ziwa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Baptism_of_Hibil_Ziwa

    A typesetted Mandaic version of DC 35 was published by Majid Fandi Al-Mubaraki in 2002. [3] BL Add. 23,602B, Kholasta sive liturgica Sabiorum Libri Joannis Fragmenta Mendaice is a book of fragments that was probably obtained by Colonel John George Taylor. It contains fragments of Maṣbuta ḏ-Hibil Ziua and Alma Rišaia Rba. [4]

  8. Scroll of the Rivers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scroll_of_the_Rivers

    A typesetted Mandaic version of DC 7 was published by Majid Fandi Al-Mubaraki in 2002. [5] In 2022, Brikha Nasoraia published an English translation and analysis. [6] Nasoraia (2022) lists four known manuscripts of the scroll, which he labels Mss A, B, C, and D. Only Mss A and B were previously known to Western scholars. [6]: 28

  9. Eniana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eniana

    Majid Fandi Al-Mubaraki includes them as part of the Sidra d-Nishmata (Book of Souls). [7] Prayer 78; Prayer 79: prayer for the klila for the staff ; Prayer 80: longer "hear me" (ʿunan ab ʿunian) prayer; Prayer 81: shorter "hear me" (ʿunan ab ʿunian) prayer; Prayer 82: mambuha prayer