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    Alf laila wa-laila aʿnī Kitāb Alf laila wa-laila

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    Alf laila wa-laila aʿnī Kitāb Alf laila wa-lailaIn arab. Schr., ara

    Alf laila wa-laila aʿnī Kitāb Alf laila wa-laila

    No full text
    Alf laila wa-laila aʿnī Kitāb Alf laila wa-lailaIn arab. Schr., arab

    Alf laila wa-laila aʿnī Kitāb Alf laila wa-laila

    No full text
    Alf laila wa-laila aʿnī Kitāb Alf laila wa-lailaIn arab. Schr., arab

    Alf laila wa-laila aʿnī Kitāb Alf laila wa-laila

    No full text
    Alf laila wa-laila aʿnī Kitāb Alf laila wa-lailaIn arab. Schr., arab

    Alf laila wa-laila aʿnī Kitāb Alf laila wa-laila

    No full text
    Alf laila wa-laila aʿnī Kitāb Alf laila wa-lailaIn arab. Schr., arab

    Sertifikat Prajabatan Laila Rahmi

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    Sertifikat Prajabatan Laila Rahm

    Fearless Friday: Laila Mufty

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    In today’s Fearless Friday, Surge would like to honor the work of Laila Mufty ‘18. Laila is a sophomore from the Bay Area in California and is majoring in Environmental Studies. Currently, she is one of the CPS Program Coordinators with Big Brothers Big Sisters and is the Immersion Project Leader for the New Orleans trip in May focused on the rebuilding of the Gulf Coast. In addition to her work with CPS, Laila participates in multiple cultural organizations on campus and has volunteered with El Centro, Painted Turtle Farm and Casa de la Cultura. Laila has also written and edited for Surge in the past. [excerpt

    Laila Doss Oral History

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    Laila Doss, a notable social activist in the area of women’s health in Egypt, was an undergraduate and graduate student at the American University in Cairo in the 1970s and 1980s, while she was in her sixties. Born in Upper Egypt and raised in Zamalek in Cairo, she speaks about her family background (especially her father Tawfik Doss, a lawyer, land owner, and government minister), including the family’s elite connections. She recalls her strict Catholic school education and then at the more open-minded American College for Girls. Doss relates family pressure to marry, which she resisted along with other social restrictions on Egyptian women. With university education discouraged, she tells of entering the field of social work in the 1930s, including a program of visiting poor neighborhoods housing families affected by sicknesses like tuberculosis, and her involvement with the Tahsin al-Saha [Women’s Organization for Health Improvement]. Doss tells of the centers the group operated, initiatives in health and family planning, fundraising efforts supported by celebrities, and the group’s openness to people regardless of religion. Her continuing work with children later in her career, as well as international travel and conferences, are discussed as well. Laila Doss tells of pursuing BA and MA degrees at AUC while in her sixties, covering her study of literature, classroom experiences, and her interactions with student classmates decades younger than her

    Alf laila wa-laila aʿnī Kitāb Alf laila wa-laila

    No full text
    Alf laila wa-laila aʿnī Kitāb Alf laila wa-lailaIn arab. Schr., arab
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