Examples of using Druze in English and their translations into Vietnamese
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of 30,519 in the 2004 census.[1] Ashrafiyat Sahnaya is one of the few towns in the Ghouta with a majority Druze community, along with Jaramana,
of 1,831 in the 2004 census.[1] It has a significant population of Druze, who inhabit several small villages in the A'la Mountain and its vicinity.[2].
country in May 2005, the anti-Syrian coalition of Sunni Muslim, Druze and Christian parties led by Saad Hariri,
the Alawite State and Jabal Druze State.
the Alawite State and Jabal Druze State.
1925 to June 1927, it was an anti-French, anti-imperialist response to five years of French rule; to the Druze it was not a movement toward Syrian unity, but simply a protest against French rule.
the Alawite State and Jabal Druze State.
a 1949 military coup).[3] The Syrian army was dominated by recruits from Alawite, Druze and rural Kurdish Sunni communities, a holdover from
conquered the Levant from the Ottoman Empire, he recruited a Druze force to subjugate the Alawites of the Coastal Mountain Range.
as well as Druze and a small Samaritan community.
making these unintelligible noises, and at one point started speaking fluent English and using phrases like“my dear” and“oh my goodness”, which are hardly ever used in his home village, near the Druze town of Majdal Shams, in northern Israel.
As-Sijn was destroyed by Ottoman forces under the command of Sami Faruqi Pasha during the 1910 Druze revolt.[14] The Ottomans were driven out of Syria by Arab and British forces in 1918, during World War I. Sometime after its destruction in 1910, the village was restored and in 1919 it had an estimated population of 800 Druze, 100 Christians and 20 Muslims.
Kaftin had a population of 2,346 in the 2004 census.[1] Its inhabitants are predominantly members of the Druze community, one of the few Druze villages situated in northern Syria.[2][3]
Maronites, Druze, Mandaeans, and Mhallami,
combined population of 44,512.[1] Sahnaya is one of the few towns in the Ghouta with a majority Druze community, along with Jaramana,
Qalb Loze has provided a safe haven for Druze deserters from the Syrian Army, clinics for wounded rebels, and has provided shelter for local refugees fleeing the violence in their towns and villages.[2] However, on June 10, 2015, 20 Druze were massacred there by the Nusra Front.
The people of Midan revolted aggressively against the French and thus suffered heavy bombing during the Great Syrian Revolt of 1925-1927.[3] Their actions were driven in part by the extensive commercial links connecting the grain merchants of the neighborhood with Druze notables in the Hawran, among whom the revolt had begun.[4].
Junblatt, near the Druze cemetery!
Jumblatt, near the Druze cemetery!
A little more about the Druze.