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Munira Bella
Munira (also spelled Monireh, , meaning ''luminous'', ''bright'', ''shining'') is a female given name. Notable people with the given name include: * Munira A. Basrai, American geneticist * Munira Fakhro, Bahraini academic * Mounira El Mahdeya (1885–1965), Egyptian singer * Monireh Gorji (1929-2025), Iranian teacher and mujtahid * Munira Khalil, American chemist * Munírih Khánum (1847–1938), prominent Bahá'í * Munira Mirza (born 1978), British political adviser * Munira Mosli (1954–2019), Saudi Arabian plastic arts worker and painter * Munira al-Qubaysi (1933–2022), Syrian Sufi * Monira Rahman (born 1966), Bangladeshi activist * Munira Wilson (born 1978), British politician See also * Munir *'' Munira'', a genus of Fly Flies are insects of the order Diptera, the name being derived from the Greek δι- ''di-'' "two", and πτερόν ''pteron'' "wing". Insects of this order use only a single pair of wings to fly, the hindwings having evolved into advanced .... ...
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Munira Fakhro
Munira Fakhro () is a Bahraini academic and was a candidate in Bahrain's 2006 general election for Wa'ad, the country's largest leftist political party. Dr Fakhro is an associate professor at thUniversity of Bahrain having received her Doctorate in Social Policy, Planning and Administration from Columbia University where she has served as a visiting scholar since 1997. She has also conducted research on gender, citizenship and civil society in the Persian Gulf states at the Centre for Middle East Studies, Harvard University. She has published works on Bahrain, including issues related to women, civil society and democratisation. Dr. Fakhro is also currently a board member of the Bahrain Academic Society and the Supreme Council for Women

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Mounira El Mahdeya
Monira Elmahdiyya (born Zakiyya Hesin Mansur, ) also known by the nicknames "Soltanet Eltarab" (= Queen of Singing), was an Egyptian singer and actress. She was considered to be the leading Egyptian singer in the 1920s. Early life Mounira Elmahdiyya was born as Zakiyya Hesin Mansur in 1885. Her birthplace is Al Mahdeya village , Hehia, in Egypt. She studied in a French nuns' school. Career She studied in a French nuns’ school, after which she began her career in singing in local clubs in the Azbakiyyah entertainment area. She joined the theatre of Aziz Eid, known for encouraging and developing the talents of his actors, actors who have among them many future stars such as Fatma Roshdi. This is where she acquired her acting technique and her lyrical talent as an actress and singer. She also was part of the ensemble of Salama Hegazi and when he became ill, she sang his role in Salah al-Din al-Ayubi, while dressed onstage as a man. Her first recording was in 1906, unde ...
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Monireh Gorji
Monir Gorji (; 1929 – 12 January 2025) was an Iranian teacher and ''mujtahid''. She was the only woman to be elected to the 73-seat Assembly of Experts for Constitution in 1979. The Assembly of Experts is a framework of Iran that is responsible for electing and overseeing the Supreme Leader. Gorji died on 12 January 2025. Works and contributions Gorji's works and contributions have been part of different articles and academic sources, such as a 1980 article titled "Women in the Islamic Republic of Iran". She also contributed to Islamic Feminism in Iran, requoting and highlighting the importance of women's rights and roles in accordance to the Holy Quran. Mathew Pierce writes in REMEMBERING FĀṬIMAH: NEW MEANS OF LEGITIMIZING FEMALE AUTHORITY IN CONTEMPORARY SHĪʿĪ DISCOURSE. In stark contrast, however, Massoumeh Ebtekar and Monir Gorgi wrote in 1997 that Fāṭimah, the daughter of the Prophet, had fulfilled a “role in the highest level of decision making in the society ...
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Munira Khalil
Munira Khalil is an American chemist who is the Leon C. Johnson Professor of Chemistry and department chair at the University of Washington. Early life and education Khalil attended Colgate University, where she majored in chemistry and English and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. She moved to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology for doctoral research, where she developed coherent two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy to study the molecular structure of coupled vibrations on a picosecond timescale. Khalil moved to the University of California, Berkeley as a postdoctoral researcher, where she was made a Miller Fellow. Research and career In 2007, Khalili joined the University of Washington. Her research makes use of ultrafast spectroscopies to understand the structural dynamics of molecules. Photoinduced charge transfer depends on an interplay between atomic and electronic processes on multi-dimensional energy surfaces. She develops 3D electronic-vibrational femtosecond s ...
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Munírih
Munírih K͟hánum (‎; 1847April 28, 1938) was the wife of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, a prominent figure in the Baháʼí Faith. She was entitled the Holy Mother. Her memoirs, first published in 1924, are regarded as one of the first published memoirs by a Persian woman in the 20th century. Childhood and early years Munírih Khánum was born Fáṭimih Nahrí, the eldest child of Muhammad ʻAlí Nahrí and his wife, Zahrá of Isfahán in Isfahan. The Nahrí family was a prominent family in the city, and her family were one of the first Bábís of Isfahan who later became eminent Baháʼís of Persia. The family were also highly connected with high-ranking nobles and clerics of the city. Her maternal uncle was killed at the age of fourteen in Persia because of his religion. Munírih's birth came as a surprise to her parents. Her father was previously married and had no children. Upon his wife's death, he remarried Zahrá Khánum. Munírih's birth in 1847 did not occur until some ten yea ...
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Munira Mirza
Munira Mirza (born May 1978) is a British political advisor who served as Director of the Number 10 Policy Unit under Prime Minister Boris Johnson from 2019 until she resigned in February 2022. She previously worked under Johnson as Deputy Mayor for Education and Culture when he was Mayor of London. Early life and education Mirza was born in Oldham, Greater Manchester, England. Her family came to the United Kingdom from Pakistan; her father found work in a factory while her mother was a housewife and taught Urdu part-time. She had two older brothers and an older sister. Mirza went to Breeze Hill School until 16, then moved to Oldham Sixth Form College for her A-levels. She was the only pupil in her Sixth Form college to gain a place at Oxford University, where she read English Literature at Mansfield College, graduating in 1999. In 2004 she received a Master of Arts in Social Research at the University of Kent followed by a PhD in Sociology under Frank Furedi in 2009. Career E ...
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Munira Mosli
Munira Ahmed Muhammad Mosli () (July 1954 – January 2019) was a Saudi Arabian plastic works artist and painter. She worked with the materials copper, natural dyes, palm tree fibre, plants, paper, papyrus, and oysters and employed the collage technique. Mosli worked on events inspired by Arab world events, human archaeology, music, nature, poetry and the whole universe. She exhibited her works in the Arab world and worked for the Arab Gulf Programme for the United Nations Development Programme in 1994. An art gallery in Saudi Arabia was directed to be renamed after Mosli following the death of the artist. Biography In July 1954, Mosli was born in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. She began drawing at an early age. Mosli held her first exhibition of her plastic works with her colleague Safia bin Zaqer at the School of Modern Education in 1968, and her first private exhibition followed four years later in her grandmother's city of Jeddah. She studied in primary and high schools in Lebanon, and ...
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Munira Al-Qubaysi
Shaykha Munira Qubaysi (also spelled Qubeysi; ; 1933 – December 25, 2022) was an Islamic scholar. Education Qubaysi completed a Bachelor’s degree in biology at the University of Damascus in the 1950s in an era when women in hijab studying at universities was either a rarity or entirely non-existent. She later earned another degree in Islamic studies (shariah) and learned both the outward and inward (Islamic spirituality) sciences of Islam from some of the most renowned scholars of Damascus. She was given the authorization (ijaza) to teach and be a spiritual guide. She established her own independent women's spiritual movement while simultaneously maintaining collaborative connections with the major religious leaders of Syria as a Muslim spiritual leader in her own right. After she died, much of the major male religious figures in Syria and beyond came forward to pay condolences and recognize her work.       She was born in 1938 to an Algerian father, Muhammad ʿAlī Ḥ ...
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Monira Rahman
Monira Rahman is a Bangladeshi human rights activist. She was born in 1965 in Jessore, East Pakistan (present-day Bangladesh). Due to her movement, acid and petrol attacks on women in Bangladesh have been reduced by 40 fold. She has changed laws. She has ensured prompt, competent help even in remote areas, and has built model psychological and other follow-up services. Rahman won Amnesty International Human Rights Defender Award 2006 for her courageous activism. She worked with the founder of Acid Survivors Foundation (ASF), Dr John Morrison and subsequently worked as executive director from 2002 to 2013. Rahman was commended by the World's Children's Prize in 2011 for her courageous fight to put an end to acid and petrol violence in Bangladesh. Rahman became Commonwealth Professional Fellow in 2012 and Ashoka Fellow in 2013. Early life Rahman was the youngest of her six siblings. During the Bangladesh Liberation War (1971), her family had to flee and her father died, leaving ...
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Munira Wilson
Munira Hassam Wilson (; born 26 April 1978) is a British Liberal Democrat politician who has been Member of Parliament (MP) for Twickenham since 2019. She has served as the Liberal Democrat spokesperson for education since 2021 under Sir Ed Davey, and previously as the spokesperson for health, wellbeing and social care from 2020 to 2021. Early life and career Munira Hassam was born on 26 April 1978 in London to parents of East African Indian heritage. Her parents were both born in Zanzibar. Her father went to study in Britain. Her mother, aged 21 and stateless, fled to Britain during the Zanzibar Revolution. They met in Britain. She grew up in London and attended Henrietta Barnett School, a state grammar school in north London. She then went on to study at St Catharine's College, Cambridge, from 1996 to 2000, where she graduated with a degree in French and German, including a year abroad as an English assistant in two secondary schools in southern France. After graduation, ...
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Munir
Muneer (also spelled Moneer, Monir, Mounir, or Muneyr, , meaning ''illuminating'', ''lightsome'', ''bright'', ''luminous'') is a masculine Arabic given name, it may refer to: Given name * Muneer Ahmad, American professor of law * {{anbl, Mounir Akbache * Munir Akram (born 1945), Pakistan Ambassador to the United Nations from 2002 to 2008 * Munir al-Rayyes (1901-1992), was a prominent Syrian newspaper editor and writer * Munir Awad (born 1981), citizen of Sweden who has fallen under suspicion of an association with terrorism * Muneer Ahmed Badini (born 1953), Pakistani writer * Munir Bashir (1930-1997), Assyrian musician * Munir Bhatti (died 2024), Pakistani field hockey player * Münir Ertegün (1883-1944), Turkish politician * Muneer Fareed (born 1956), American scholar * Münir Hüsrev Göle (1890–1955), Turkish politician * Munir El Haddadi (born 1995), Moroccan footballer * Mounir El Hamdaoui (born 1984), Dutch-Moroccan footballer * Monir Haidar, Bangladeshi journalist ...
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