al-Jami'a al-Islamiyya - الجامعة الاسلامية
January 1938
Sunday
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
2
Sunday, 2 January 1938
1 issue
3
Monday, 3 January 1938
1 issue
4
Tuesday, 4 January 1938
1 issue
5
Wednesday, 5 January 1938
1 issue
6
Thursday, 6 January 1938
1 issue
7
Friday, 7 January 1938
1 issue
9
Sunday, 9 January 1938
1 issue
10
Monday, 10 January 1938
1 issue
11
Tuesday, 11 January 1938
1 issue
12
Wednesday, 12 January 1938
1 issue
13
Thursday, 13 January 1938
1 issue
14
Friday, 14 January 1938
1 issue
16
Sunday, 16 January 1938
1 issue
17
Monday, 17 January 1938
1 issue
18
Tuesday, 18 January 1938
1 issue
19
Wednesday, 19 January 1938
1 issue
21
Friday, 21 January 1938
1 issue
23
Sunday, 23 January 1938
1 issue
24
Monday, 24 January 1938
1 issue
26
Wednesday, 26 January 1938
1 issue
27
Thursday, 27 January 1938
1 issue
28
Friday, 28 January 1938
1 issue
30
Sunday, 30 January 1938
1 issue
31
Monday, 31 January 1938
1 issue
Searching...
You are currently viewing a newspaper from our Jrayed Collection (the Archive of Arabic Newspapers of Ottoman and Mandatory Palestine). To access the collection's specialized search tools, click here.
About this newspaper
Title: al-Jami'a al-Islamiyya - الجامعة الاسلامية
Available online: 16 July 1932 - 28 July 1939 (1,221 issues; 8,893 pages)
Language: Arabic
Region: The Middle East
Country: Mandatory Palestine
City: Jaffa
Collection: Jrayed - Arabic Newspaper Archive of Ottoman and Mandatory Palestine
Frequency: Daily
Description:
Al-Jami'a al-Islamiyya was a daily political and cultural newspaper, with an Islamic orientation. The first issue was published in Jerusalem on July 16, 1932. It was founded by Suleiman al-Taji al-Faruqi, a blind sheikh and lawyer who studied at Al-Azhar under the auspices of the thinker Muhammad 'Abduh, where he was called “Ma'ari of Palestine” (after the famous blind Arab philosopher) and then studied law in Istanbul and mastered several languages, including Turkish, French and English. Al-Faruq was known for his defense of the Palestinians before the British courts, in addition to his nationalist-Islamic orientation. The newspaper was concerned with political and social issues, but at the same time it devoted space to stories of Islamic heritage and historical articles that tried to build awareness of the Arab-Islamic civilization.
[ + Show More ]
Tags