Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
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
The LIFG links to Al-Qaeda hail from Afghanistan, where hundreds joined Al-Qaeda. High ranking LIFG operatives inside Al-Qaeda, are the leader of the insurgency Abdel-Hakim Belhadj (also known as Abu Abdullah al-Sadiq), and the recently killed Atiyah Abd al-Rahman, who was killed in a CIA drone strike, and Al-Qaeda's Abu Yahya al-Libi. [13]
Sheikh Rukn-ud-Din Abul Fateh (Punjabi: شیخ رکن الدین ابوالفتح; 26 November 1251 – 3 January 1335), commonly known by the title Shah Rukn-e-Alam ("Pillar of the World"), was an eminent 13th and 14th-century Punjabi Muslim Sufi saint from Multan (present-day Punjab, Pakistan), who belonged to Suhrawardiyya Sufi order.
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).
Pengiran Anak Mohamed Alam was born on 18 October 1918 in Kampong Pengiran Bendahara Lama, Brunei Town (now Bandar Seri Begawan). [1] He was the son of Pengiran Bendahara Pengiran Anak Abdul Rahman, who served as Pengiran Bendahara for 25 years until his death during the Japanese occupation, [2] and Pengiran Fatimah.
Badre Alam was born in 1898 in a Sayyid family in the Budaun district of Uttar Pradesh. [4] His father, Tahur Ali, served as a police officer. [2] He received his initial education at an English school in Aligarh, and influenced by a sermon of Ashraf Ali Thanwi at the age of eleven, he developed an inclination towards Islamic studies. [5]