Hassan youssef yassin biography of abraham
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Saudi Arabia is a true melting pot of the world
Throughout history, Arabia has been a crossroads of civilization. Most notably on the Silk Road and Incense Road, much trade passed through Arabia. The well of Zamzam was also an important station for traders.
Ideally situated between Africa, Europe and Asia, Arabia has continued to be a hub for travelers of all kinds.
The annual Hajj organized by Saudi Arabia’s authorities is one of the world’s largest gatherings, annually welcoming 2 to 3 million Muslims for at least four days. This melting pot represents the 2 billion Muslims whose devotion centers on Makkah in the Kingdom.
The diversity of pilgrims during the Hajj in Saudi Arabia reflects the community’s makeup worldwide. Their devotion goes back to Abraham, the father of all believers in the three great monotheistic faiths from the Middle East. As Muslims enter Makkah’s grand mosque and see the Kaaba, they pray and bow in gratitude to Abraham, who is considered to ha
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2. Monarchie et symbolique religieuse
1Au lendemain de l’indépendance, la lutte pour le pouvoir qui s’engage ingång le mouvement national et Mohammed V est autant un combat pour le présent dem la monarchie que pour son avenir. Devenir aujourd’hui l’unique maître du pays, c’est donner les moyens au jeune Hassan d’être un roi qui règne et gouverne. Dans le même temps, Mohammed V tient à préserver intacte sa sainteté et il ne veut pas avoir les « mains sales ». Il est plus à l’aise dans l’habit de l’imam que dans le treillis militaire. Il préfère gouverner du haut d’un minbar et la khotba (prône) est l’exercice qu’il maîtrise le mieux. En mars à la mosquée Hassan de prisavdrag, il donne un prêche et commente versets coraniques et dits du Prophète (hadîth) sur le bien et le mal qui attend la communauté musulmane : « Celui qui obéit à Dieu et à son envoyé est dans la bonne voie […]. Suivez la voie de son orthodoxie, suivez la voie droite dem l’envoyé dem Dieu et suivez l’orientation d
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We the people of the world
Whenever we find ourselves, as today, trapped in an impasse of hatred and violence, my mind returns to the three figures who embodied nonviolent resistance, who were able to bring about extraordinary changes of freedom, reconciliation and understanding. Of course I am referring to Mahatma Gandhi, Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King Jr., who individually and collectively taught the world the most precious lessons that we can draw upon today.
When faced with hatred, violence, killing and imprisonment, they preached love, understanding and the overcoming of tremendous challenges through integrity and respect. With the human tragedies unfolding in Gaza and Ukraine today, it is high time we relearned those lessons.
Gandhi led a series of nonviolent actions designed to reflect to the British that their actions were anything but high-minded. Gandhi’s satyagraha, or “truth-force,” employed nonviolence, or ahimsa, in the form of civil disobedience, tax