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Search resuls for: "Islamic Art"


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Months before United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was shot to death on a Manhattan sidewalk, suspect Luigi Mangione went dark and loved ones desperately tried to find him. After months of silence and growing worry from his family and friends, Mangione finally resurfaced Monday when he was captured by police in Pennsylvania as the suspect in Thompson’s killing. Mangione is fighting extradition to New York, and his lawyer, Thomas Dickey, said he has yet to see evidence linking his client to Thompson’s killing. The two last texted about nine months ago, when Martin reached out to ask Mangione whether he had undergone spinal surgery. The cousin said Mangione had been missing for months, had undergone back surgery and the family was desperate to find him.
Persons: Brian Thompson, Luigi Mangione, Mangione, , R.J, Martin, “ It’s, Thomas Dickey, Mister_Cactus ”, , “ Mister_Cactus ”, couldn’t, ” Martin, it’s, Kaczynski, Gurwinder, Bhogal, ” Bhogal, Luigi, don’t, Raj George, George, Penn, ” George, Freddie Leatherbury, Leatherbury, ” Leatherbury, Mangione’s, Gilman, they’d, Thompson, Mark Rosario ”, Thompson’s, lionizing Mangione, Jessica Tisch Organizations: United, Authorities, University of Pennsylvania, Industrial Society, Its, NBC News, Penn, Penn Club of Hawaii, Shangri, Islamic Art, Design, Gilman School, Police, NBC New, New York Police Locations: Manhattan, Pennsylvania, Baltimore, Maryland, Honolulu, New York, Altoona , Pennsylvania, Hawaii, Asia, China, British, U.S, Japan, San Francisco, midtown Manhattan, New Jersey, Maplewood, NBC New York
“Kara Walker’s silhouettes have played a big role in my work. When you look back at some of my [paintings] from the past, you can see [similar] black silhouettes,” Uman says. She’s also inspired by the Norwegian artist Bjarne Melgaard, at whose studio she previously worked. “He showed me it was OK to make very violent and extreme work. I had always been trying to refine things, but he showed me that you could make these very crude, brutish paintings,” she says.
Persons: “ Kara, , She’s, Bjarne Melgaard, Locations: ” Uman, Norwegian
[1/5] European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen attends the informal meeting of European heads of state or government, in Granada, Spain October 6, 2023. On Thursday night, Von der Leyen was visiting Granada's famed Alhambra Palace and fortress - built by the city's Muslim rulers in the 13th century - when she complemented guide Sumaya Abdelbi on her silk scarf. Abdelbi, who was born in Germany and is of Moroccan origin, briefed Von de Leyen and her husband on the palace. "I told her that she was now also part of the history of the Alhambra and she was very impressed," Abdelbi told Reuters. As Von der Leyen was leaving the event, Abdelbi saw her again and shouted: "I want to give you my scarf!".
Persons: Ursula von der Leyen, Juan Medina, Ursula Von der Leyen, Von der Leyen, Granada's, Von de Leyen, Abdelbi, Belén Carreño, Andrei Khalip Organizations: European, REUTERS, Rights, European Union, Alhambra, Reuters, EU, Thomson Locations: Granada, Spain, Rights GRANADA, Spanish, Alhambra, Germany
Bulldozers tear into Cairo's historic Islamic cemeteries
  + stars: | 2023-06-19 | by ( Hatem Maher | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
[1/5] A view shows the City of the Dead, where tombs and historic cemeteries have been demolished due to a new construction project underway on the Salah Salem road, in the capital city of Cairo, Egypt, June 13, 2023. Known as the City of the Dead, the cemeteries along the eastern edge of Historic Cairo have been a resting place for Egypt's deceased since the arrival of Islam in the seventh century A.D. Some tomb owners who want to transfer the bodies of their family members say they are given little time beforehand. But only 102 sites among more than 2.5 million tombs in the area have received this designation, conservationists say. "I imagine that in five years' time, we won't find anything except maybe 20% of the current City of the Dead," Lafi said.
Persons: Salah, Hadeer Mahmoud, Sisi, Egypt's, Hisham Kassem, Abdel Fattah al, Ahmed Urabi, Hossam Abdel Azeem, Amr ibn, Moaaz, Lafi, Patrick Werr, Aidan Lewis, Emma Rumney Organizations: REUTERS, UNESCO, Thomson Locations: Salah Salem, Cairo, Egypt, CAIRO, Historic Cairo, el
Afghanistan is selling tickets to the ruins of recently-destroyed monuments, the Washington Post reported. Tickets to see the cavernous remains of the Bamiyan Buddhas, in the Hazarajat region, are sold to locals for 57 cents and $3.45 to foreigners, the paper reported. L: One of the Bamiyan Buddhas in 1997. But some Afghan officials believe that sites like Bamiyan still have potential to bring in significant tourist money, despite the loss of the Buddhas. Mohammedi is planning a souvenir market nearby, The Washington Post reported.
Persons: , Sayed Salahuddin, Bamiyan, Saifurrahman Mohammadi, we've Organizations: Washington Post, Service, Slate, American, Taliban, Sayed Salahuddin AS, Reuters, CNN, UN, Financial Times, The Washington Post Locations: Afghanistan, Hazarajat, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, The
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