Hassouna Benchaïb
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Hassouna Benchaïb
Hassouna () is both an Arabic masculine given name and a surname, mostly mentioned in reference to the Hassouna family a noble and wealthy Palestinian family with deep historical roots in the village of Hiribya that was depopulated in 1948 and is now the site of Zikim—with its family seat in the Rimal neighborhood of the Gaza Strip, becoming influential residents and one of the wealthiest families in Gaza. The family has played a significant role in Gaza, with many of its members recognized for their contributions to the social and civic landscape of Gaza, particularly in healthcare . Notable people with the name include: Surname * Anissa Hassouna (1953–2022), Egyptian politician * Audai Hassouna (born 1998), Libyan swimmer * Fatima Hassouna (1999–2025), Palestinian photojournalist * Mohamed Abdul Khalek Hassouna (1898–1992), Egyptian-Palestinian diplomat, Secretary-General of the Arab League (1952–1972) Given name * Hassouna Mosbahi (1950–2025), Tunisian author ...
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Hassouna Family
Hassouna () is both an Arabic masculine given name and a surname, mostly mentioned in reference to the Hassouna family a noble and wealthy Palestinian family with deep historical roots in the village of Hiribya that was depopulated in 1948 and is now the site of Zikim—with its family seat in the Rimal neighborhood of the Gaza Strip, becoming influential residents and one of the wealthiest families in Gaza. The family has played a significant role in Gaza, with many of its members recognized for their contributions to the social and civic landscape of Gaza, particularly in healthcare . Notable people with the name include: Surname * Anissa Hassouna (1953–2022), Egyptian politician * Audai Hassouna (born 1998), Libyan swimmer * Fatima Hassouna (1999–2025), Palestinian photojournalist * Mohamed Abdul Khalek Hassouna (1898–1992), Egyptian-Palestinian diplomat, Secretary-General of the Arab League (1952–1972) Given name * Hassouna Mosbahi (1950–2025), Tunisian author, lit ...
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Hiribya
Hirbiya () was a Palestinian people, Palestinian Arab village in the Gaza Subdistrict, Mandatory Palestine, Gaza Subdistrict, located northeast of Gaza City, Gaza along the southern coastal plain of Palestine (region), Palestine. Situated where the Battle of La Forbie took place in 1244, it was depopulated during the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.Khalidi, 1992, p.101. History Prehistory Bronze Age Settlement at the site of Hirbiya dates back to the Canaanite period. Crusader period It was known as "Forbie" to the Kingdom of Jerusalem, Crusaders. In 1226, the Syria (region), Syrian geographer Yaqut al-Hamawi called it "Firbiya" (or "Farbaya") and noted that it was within the administrative jurisdiction of Ascalon. The village was the site of a crucial battle, called the Battle of La Forbie, between the Crusaders and the Ayyubids, which ended in a decisive Ayyubid victory. Historians consider it second in strategic significance only to the Battle of Hattin in 1187. A circular Water ...
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Zikim
Zikim () is a kibbutz in southern Israel. Located in the northern Negev desert, it falls under the jurisdiction of Hof Ashkelon Regional Council. In , it had a population of . Etymology Michael Harsgor, later an Israeli historian, came up with the name for a future kibbutz he wished to once join, while being imprisoned during the Second World War in Romania, an ally of Nazi Germany, for his activity in Hashomer Hatzair. He says he translated a quote from Pushkin into Hebrew: "From sparks shall come a flame." History Background For settlement history preceding the kibbutz, see Hiribya: History. The Late Neolithic Ziqim archaeological site is associated with the Nizzanim culture. Ancient discoveries in Zikim comprise a Greek graffito on the base of a high-quality plate dating from 144-160 BCE, and Greek inscriptions on Gazan jars from the 6th to early 7th century CE. Hiribya was known in the medieval Crusader period as La Forbie, site of the 1244 Battle of Forbie. Kibbut ...
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Rimal
Rimal or Remal () is a neighborhood in Gaza City located from the city center. Situated along the coastline, it was considered the most prosperous neighborhood of Gaza.Jacobs, 1998, p.455. The main street that runs through Gaza, Omar Mukhtar Street, runs northwest–southeast in the district and the main coastal road, Ahmad Orabi/Rasheed Street, northeast-southwest. Rimal is divided into the city districts of southern Rimal and northern Rimal. The neighborhood is the site of multiple government ministries and has been severely damaged during the ongoing Gaza war. History Rimal is built on the ancient port city of Gaza called '' Maioumas''. The intense rivalry between Christian Gaza and Pagan Maioumas continued throughout the Byzantine era, even after the population of Maioumas had been converted to Christianity by Imperial decree and the Pagan sanctuaries destroyed by Porphyry of Gaza. The coastline of Gaza consisted mostly of sand dunes around the bustling Port of Gaza up ...
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Anissa Hassouna
Anissa Hassouna (22 January 1953 – 13 March 2022) was an Egyptian politician who was a member of the Egyptian Parliament. Hassouna served as secretary-general of the Egyptian Council for Foreign Affairs and executive-director of the Magdi Yacoub Foundation. She graduated from Cairo University with a degree in political science and lived in Cairo, Egypt. In 2014, Arabian Business and CEO Middle East Magazine named Hassouna one of the World's 100 Most Powerful Arab Women. Her bestselling memoir, ''Bedoon Sabeq Enzar'' (''Without Prior Warning''), describes her recurrent battle with cancer. Her book inspired many readers throughout the Middle East and motivated her to speak on World Cancer Day 2018, reminding individuals that cancer is an emotional and psychological battle, as well as a medical one. Early life Anissa Hassouna was born in 1953 in Cairo, Egypt. As a child she first attended the Coptic Church school in Asyut, then a school in Beni Suef, and ended prep school in ...
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Audai Hassouna
Audai Hassouna (born 18 October 1998) is a Libyan swimmer. He competed in the men's 200 metre freestyle at the 2020 Summer Olympics The officially the and officially branded as were an international multi-sport event that was held from 23 July to 8 August 2021 in Tokyo, Japan, with some of the preliminary sporting events beginning on 21 July 2021. Tokyo .... References External links * 1998 births Living people Libyan male swimmers Libyan male freestyle swimmers Olympic swimmers for Libya Swimmers at the 2020 Summer Olympics Place of birth missing (living people) African Games competitors for Libya Swimmers at the 2019 African Games 21st-century Libyan sportsmen {{Libya-swimming-bio-stub ...
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Fatima Hassouna
Fatima Hassouna ( ; 1999 – 16 April 2025), sometimes spelled Fatma Hassona, was a Palestinian photojournalist whose work documented civilian life during the Gaza war. She gained international recognition for her visceral documentation of war impacts and became the subject of the documentary film ''Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk'', selected for the ACID film programme shown in parallel with the 2025 Cannes Film Festival. She was killed alongside ten family members in an Israeli airstrike on their Gaza City home on 16 April 2025. Life Hassouna was born in Gaza City in 1999 and graduated with a multimedia degree from the University College of Applied Sciences in Gaza. She began documenting life in Gaza after the October 7 Hamas-led attack on Israel. As one of few local journalists able to document the war after Israel banned foreign reporters from Gaza, Hassouna chronicled forced civilian evacuations under Israeli military orders; destruction of infrastructure from airstr ...
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Mohamed Abdul Khalek Hassouna
Mohamed Abdulkhalek El Sayed Hassouna (; 28 October 1898 – 20 January 1992) was an Egyptian-Palestinian diplomat who served as the second Secretary-General of the Arab League Life and career Born in Cairo in 1898, Abdel-Khalek Hassouna was the grandson of Al-Azhar Grand Sheikh Hassouna El-Nawawi, who hails from the noble Hassouna family. He obtained a degree in law in 1921. Hassouna Pasha as he was later known obtained his masters and doctorate degrees in economics and political science from the University of Cambridge in 1925, where he was a member of Magdalene College. He joined the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1926 and served at the Egyptian embassies in Berlin, Rome, Prague and Stockholm. Hassouna was the undersecretary of state at the Ministry of Social Affairs between 1939 and 1942. He served as governor of Alexandria from 1942 to 1948, during which time the University of Alexandria was completed. He served as social affairs minister between 1949 and 1952 and ...
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Hassouna Mosbahi
Hassouna Mosbahi (; 1950 – 4 June 2025) was a Tunisian author, literary critic and freelance journalist. Life and career Hassouna Mosbahi was born in 1950 in the village of Dhehibat in the governorate of Kairouan, Tunisia, and studied French at the Tunis University. He suffered persecution at the hands of the government of Habib Bourguiba and so sought refuge in Europe, moving to Munich, Germany in 1985. He returned to Tunisia in 2004. He published four collections of short stories and six novels and has been translated into German and English. He also published dozens of translations of French literary works into Arabic. His work won several literary prizes, including the Munich Fiction Prize (for the German translation of his novel ''Tarshish Hallucination),'' and the 2016 Mohamed Zefzef Prize for Fiction (for his novel ''A Tunisian Tale''). In 2010 he refused a "Judges' Choice" prize from the Prix Littéraires COMAR D’OR for his novel ''Ramād al-ḥayāh (Ashes of ...
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Killing Of Sidra Hassouna
Killing, Killings, or The Killing may refer to: Types of killing *-cide, a suffix that refers to types of killing (see List of types of killing), such as: ** Homicide, one human killing another *** Murder, unlawful killing of another human without justification or valid excuse *Animal slaughter, the killing of animals * Assisted dying Arts, entertainment, and media Films * ''Killing'' (film), a 2018 Japanese film * ''The Killing'' (film), a 1956 film noir directed by Stanley Kubrick * '' Encounter: The Killing'', a 2002 Indian film by Ajay Phansekar Television * ''The Killing'' (Danish TV series), a police procedural drama first broadcast in 2007 * ''The Killing'' (American TV series), a crime drama based on the Danish television series, first broadcast in 2011 Literature * ''Killing'' (comics), Italian photo comic series about a vicious vigilante-criminal * ''Killing'', a series of historical nonfiction books by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard * "Killings" (short story), ...
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Hassuna Culture
The Hassuna culture is a Neolithic archaeological culture in northern Mesopotamia dating to the early sixth millennium BC. It is named after the type site of Tell Hassuna in Iraq. Other sites where Hassuna material has been found include Tell Shemshara. Description By around 6000 BC people had moved into the foothills (piedmont) of northernmost Mesopotamia where there was enough rainfall to allow for "dry" agriculture in some places. These were the first farmers in northernmost Mesopotamia. They made Hassuna-style pottery (cream slip with reddish paint in linear designs). Hassuna people lived in small villages or hamlets ranging . At Tell Hassuna, adobe dwellings built around open central courts with fine painted pottery replace earlier levels with crude pottery. Hand axes, sickles, grinding stones, bins, baking ovens, and numerous bones of domesticated animals reflect settled agricultural life. Female figurines have been related to worship and jar burials within which foo ...
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Tell Hassuna
Tell Hassuna is a tell, or settlement mound, in the Nineveh Province (Iraq), about 35km south-west of Nineveh. It is the type site for the Hassuna culture (early sixth millennium BCE). History of archaeological research Tell Hassuna was found in 1942 by Fuad Safar, and excavated in 1943 and 1944 by a team from the Iraqi Directorate General of Antiquities led by Seton Lloyd. Excavations revealed that there was once an advanced village culture that was spread throughout northern Mesopotamia. At Hassuna, six different layers of houses were uncovered, revealing various vessels and pottery that date ~5600-5350 BCE, with each layer becoming more substantial. Similar vessels were found throughout the Middle East, showing that there was an extensive trade network that was present as early as the 6th Millennium BCE. Tell Hassuna and its environment Tell Hassuna is located approximately southwest of modern Mosul, along the west bank of the Tigris River. It is a small site, roughly ...
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