Mullah Attiya Al-Jamri
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Mullah Mullah () is an honorific title for Islam, Muslim clergy and mosque Imam, leaders. The term is widely used in Iran and Afghanistan and is also used for a person who has higher education in Islamic theology and Sharia, sharia law. The title h ...
Attiya al-Jamri (, c.1899 – 29 August 1981) was a
Bahrain Bahrain, officially the Kingdom of Bahrain, is an island country in West Asia. Situated on the Persian Gulf, it comprises a small archipelago of 50 natural islands and an additional 33 artificial islands, centered on Bahrain Island, which mak ...
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khatib In Islam, a khatib or khateeb ( ''khaṭīb'') is a person who delivers the sermon (''khuṭbah'') (literally "narration"), during the Friday prayer and Eid prayers. The ''khateeb'' is usually the prayer leader (''imam''), but the two roles can ...
and poet. Researcher Clive Holes translated two of Al-Jamri's poems into books, one of which was distributed to 11,000 teachers from different schools in the UK which meant that the short story was read by over 330,000 students."هولز: ترجمتي لقصيدتين للملا عطية الجمري تلقى رواجاً كبيراً في المدارس البريطانية"
'' Al-Wasat''. 26 May 2012. Retrieved 6 July 2012. Al-Jamri is well recognized in Bahrain, the Gulf and Iraq for his poems about Imam Hussain and for his unique methods of reading lamentation poems during the month of Muharram.


References


Further reading

* ''The Rat and the Ship’s Captain: a dialogue poem from the Gulf, with some comments on the social and literary-historical background of the genre'', Studia Orientalia 75 (1995), 101-120. *''The Debate of Pearl-Diving and Oil Wells: a poetic commentary on socio-economic change in the Gulf of the 1930s'', Arabic and Middle Eastern Literatures Vol 1 No 1 (1998), 87-112. {{DEFAULTSORT:Jamri, Attiya al- 1890s births 1981 deaths 20th-century Bahraini poets