Everything posted by ceader'schild
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Are you Baptised?
I was baptized when i was a baby and i don't mind it at all since i am a believer, although i'm not very religious anymore, and i did my first communion when i was about 9, i remember we had to go to church twice a week every week for about 3 months before the actual ceremony to prepare for it and learn about the bible, the church....and the priest would get angry and yell if any of us missed mass on Sunday we were about 50 kids i kept wondering how he could remember us all and all our parents:o :shrug:
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Lebanese Coldplay fans?!
3anjadd?:wideeyed: seriously??:awesome: ana 3am ba3mil archeology:D w 3am bekhoud sfouf 3an art history:dance: 2ekhtisasetna ktir 2rab 3a ba3ed:o b 2ayya jem3a:inquisitive:?? ana bel lebneye bel Fanar!!
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Iraqi and Egyptian Christians Killings
Found parts of it online: From Qadisha valley Interview with the Lebanese Patriarch Sfeir
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Iraqi and Egyptian Christians Killings
wednesday on CNN inside the middle east they talked about Christians in the middle east, it was a really interesting episode:nice: especially the part about Iraqi Christians, if anyone is interested i suggest you watch it will air again on saturday 8th January at 8:30, 14:00, 20:30, on sunday 9 January at 18:30 and on Monday 10 January at 04:30 (all times GMT).
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Iraqi and Egyptian Christians Killings
Egyptian Christians' Christmas celebration clouded by New Year's Day bomb attack Celebrations go on as scheduled despite grief and anger over the Jan. 1 bombing at a Coptic church in Alexandria. Reporting from Cairo — Egypt's Christians celebrated Eastern Orthodox Christmas Eve on Thursday despite their mourning and anger over a New Year's Day bomb attack on a church that killed 25 Copts, and the fear of more violence. Rumors had spread that Coptic Pope Shenouda III would cancel this year's Christmas festivities. But despite Copts' grief over the deaths in the Alexandria bombing, the 87-year-old pope said celebrations would go on as scheduled. "Of course we feel sadness, and the bombings will leave their mark on all Copts," said Mina Emil, a Coptic banker. "But we will not allow this to overshadow our celebrations." No one has claimed responsibility for the attack on All Saints Church in the coastal city, which also injured dozens of people. But a statement published by a group calling itself Shabakat al Mujahedin al Elektroniya, or the Holy Warriors Electronic Network, endorsed the attack, saying that it wouldn't be the last against Copts in Egypt. Adding to the tension, a video attributed to Al Qaeda, called the "Jihadi Encyclopedia for the Destruction of the Cross," featured a line calling on Muslims in Egypt to "blow up churches while Copts are celebrating Christmas or any other time when churches are packed." It was widely circulated on the Internet. Egypt's Interior Ministry deployed armored vehicles, bomb-sniffing dogs, metal detectors and thousands of police officers to protect churches around the clock. Mosques would also be closely watched before and after Friday prayers for signs of trouble, the ministry said. Some Copts were heartened by the show of force. "Security officers are doing a very good job and everyone is doing his best to guard the church from any possible threat," said Joseph Nabil, a Copt who stood outside a church in the Shubra neighborhood of Cairo. Many Copts said they were determined not to let fear of further attacks ruin their Christmas. "We have to be realistic," Emil said. "No one can stop a suicide bomber from killing Copts, even if the whole world comes together to protect our churches." The investigation of the New Year's Day bombing continued. After the attack, President Hosni Mubarak rushed to blame "foreign hands" aiming to unsettle the country's security by triggering religious strife. Authorities have yet to provide evidence of such a plot. The Interior Ministry said the attack was carried out by a suicide bomber, and it has released a sketch by forensic artists depicting the face of the man believed to have set off the blast. But Egypt's prosecutor general issued a statement Thursday saying that investigations had yet to reach a solid conclusion on who was behind the blast or even how exactly it was carried out. The bombing in Alexandria came a month after Al Qaeda's Iraqi wing threatened to assault Coptic targets in Egypt unless two priests' wives, who allegedly were locked up in a southern monastery after converting to Islam, were released. The deadly explosion prompted riots and demonstrations throughout Egypt, mainly by angry Copts who believe that Egyptian authorities have not worked hard enough to protect them from growing hatred among some Muslims. Many secular and moderate Muslims also accuse the government of systematically oppressing and marginalizing Christians in Egypt. Copts make up about 10% of Egypt's population of more than 80 million. Despite the government's claims that Christians enjoy equality with Muslims, Copts complain of difficulties in obtaining permission to build or refurbish churches, a lack of representation in the upper ranks of the civil service and an inability to convert others to Christianity. Pope Shenouda on Monday called on the Egyptian government to "start addressing Copts' problems," which he said lay at the core of the religious animosities. Hassan is a news assistant in The Times' Cairo Bureau. Times staff writer Borzou Daragahi in Beirut contributed to this report. source
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Iraqi and Egyptian Christians Killings
Egyptian Christians' Christmas celebration clouded by New Year's Day bomb attack Celebrations go on as scheduled despite grief and anger over the Jan. 1 bombing at a Coptic church in Alexandria.
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Iraqi and Egyptian Christians Killings
DP
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Iraqi and Egyptian Christians Killings
Bomb Hits Egypt Church at New Year's Mass, 21 Dead Published January 01, 2011 ALEXANDRIA, Egypt – A powerful bomb, possibly from a homicide attacker, exploded in front of a Coptic Christian church as a crowd of worshippers emerged from a New Years Mass early Saturday, killing at least 21 people and wounding nearly 80 in an attack that raised suspicions of an Al Qaeda role. The attack came in the wake of repeated threats by Al Qaeda militants in Iraq to attack Egypt's Christians. A direct Al Qaeda hand in the bombing would be a dramatic development, as Egypt's government has long denied that the terror network has a significant presence in the country. Al Qaeda in Iraq has already been waging a campaign of violence against Christians in that country. Police initially said the blast came from an explosives-packed car parked outside the Saints Church in the Mediterranean port city. But the Interior Ministry later said it was more likely from a bomber who blew himself up among the crowd. Both tactics are hallmarks of Al Qaeda and have been rarely used in Egypt, where the government crushed an insurgency by Islamic militants in the 1990s. Though the government of President Hosni Mubarak denies an Al Qaeda presence, Egypt does have a rising movement of Islamic hard-liners who, while they do not advocate violence, adhere to an ideology similar in other ways to Al Qaeda. There have been fears they could be further radicalized amid growing sectarian tensions between Egypt's Muslim majority and Christian minority. Nearly 1,000 Christians were attending the New Year's Mass at the Saints Church, said Father Mena Adel, a priest at the church. The service had just ended, and some worshippers were leaving the building when the bomb went off about a half hour after midnight, he said. "The last thing I heard was a powerful explosion and then my ears went deaf," Marco Boutros, a 17-year-old survivor, said from his hospital bed. "All I could see were body parts scattered all over — legs and bits of flesh." Blood splattered the facade of the church, as well as a mosque directly across the street. Bodies of many of the dead were collected from the street and kept inside the church overnight before they were taken away Saturday by ambulances for burial. Some Christians carried white sheets with the sign of the cross emblazoned on them with what appeared to be the blood of the victims. Health Ministry official Osama Abdel-Moneim said the death toll stood at 21, with 79 wounded. It was not immediately known if all the victims were Christians. It was the deadliest violence involving Christians in Egypt since at least 20 people, mostly Christians, were killed in sectarian clashes in a southern town in 1999. Mubarak vowed to track down those behind the attack, saying "we will cut off the hands of terrorists and those plotting against Egypt's security." "This terrorist act has shaken the conscience of the nation," he said in a statement, adding that "all Egypt was targeted, and terrorism does not distinguish between Copt and Muslim." The blast enraged Christians and stoked already strong sectarian tensions. Soon after the explosion, angry Christians clashed with police and Muslim residents, chanting, "With our blood and soul, we redeem the cross," witnesses said. Some broke in to the mosque across the street, throwing books into the street and sparking stone- and bottle-throwing clashes with Muslims, an AP photographer at the scene said. Police fired tear gas to break up the clashes. But tempers remained high: In the afternoon, hundreds of Christians remained massed inside the church and outside on the street, where they jostled with lines of riot police, chanted, and waved crosses and pictures of Jesus. In a reflection of the deepening mistrust between Egypt's communities, many in the crowd believed police would not fully investigate the bombing, reflecting Christians' suspicions that authorities overlook attacks on their community. Archbishop Arweis, the top Coptic cleric in Alexandria, said police want to blame a suicide bomber instead of a car bomb so they can write it off as a lone attacker. He denounced what he called a lack of protection. "There were only three soldiers and an officer in front of the church. Why did they have so little security at such a sensitive time when there's so many threats coming from al-Qaida?" he said, speaking to the AP. Police initially said the blast came from an explosives-packed vehicle parked about four meters (yards) from the church. But the Interior Ministry said later in a statement that there was no sign that the epicenter was a car. That "makes it likely that the explosives ... were carried on the person of a suicide attacker who died with the others," it said. Around six severely damaged vehicles remained outside the church, but there was little sign of a crater that major car bombs usually cause. Bits of flesh were stuck to nearby walls. Alexandria governor Adel Labib immediately blamed Al Qaeda, pointing to recent threats by the terror group to attack Christians in Egypt. He offered no evidence to support his claim, but a recent spate of attacks blamed on Al Qaeda against Christians in Iraq have an unusual connection to Egypt. Al Qaeda in Iraq says it is attacking Christians there in the name of two Egyptian Christian women who reportedly converted to Islam in order to get divorces, prohibited by the Orthodox Coptic Church. The women have since been secluded by the church, prompting Islamic hard-liners to hold frequent protests in past months, accusing the Church of imprisoning the women and forcing them to renounce Islam. Al Qaeda in Iraq says its attacks on Christians would continue until Egyptian Church officials release the two women. The Church denies holding the women against their will. Egypt faced a wave of Islamic militant violence in the 1990s, that peaked with a 1997 massacre of nearly 60 tourists at a pharoanic temple in Luxor. But the government suppressed the insurgency with a fierce crackdown, and militant violence all but stopped until a series of bomb attacks against tourist resorts in the Sinai Peninsula between 2004 and 2006. Those attacks in the resorts of Dahab, Taba and Sharm el-Sheikh, which included suicide bombers and killed a total of 125 people, were blamed by the government on local extremists in an attempt to deflect concerns that Al Qaeda had established a presence in Egypt. Egypt has seen a string of attacks on Christians in recent years, most notably, in January 2009, when seven Christians were killed in a drive-by shooting on a church in southern Egypt during celebrations for the Orthodox Coptic Christmas. Christians, mainly Orthodox Copts, are believed to make up about 10 percent of Egypt's mainly Muslim population of nearly 80 million people, and they have grown increasingly vocal in complaints about discrimination. In November, hundreds of Christians rioted in the capital, Cairo, smashing cars and windows after police violently stopped the construction of a church. The rare outbreak of Christian unrest in the capital left one person dead. Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2010/12/31/explosion-hits-egypt-church-injuries-reported/#ixzz1AMhEddeT source
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Iraqi and Egyptian Christians Killings
Bomb Hits Egypt Church at New Year's Mass, 21 Dead Published January 01, 2011 Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2010/12/31/explosion-hits-egypt-church-injuries-reported/#ixzz1AMgKiSjH ALEXANDRIA, Egypt – A powerful bomb, possibly from a homicide attacker, exploded in front of a Coptic Christian church as a crowd of worshippers emerged from a New Years Mass early Saturday, killing at least 21 people and wounding nearly 80 in an attack that raised suspicions of an Al Qaeda role. The attack came in the wake of repeated threats by Al Qaeda militants in Iraq to attack Egypt's Christians. A direct Al Qaeda hand in the bombing would be a dramatic development, as Egypt's government has long denied that the terror network has a significant presence in the country. Al Qaeda in Iraq has already been waging a campaign of violence against Christians in that country. Police initially said the blast came from an explosives-packed car parked outside the Saints Church in the Mediterranean port city. But the Interior Ministry later said it was more likely from a bomber who blew himself up among the crowd. Both tactics are hallmarks of Al Qaeda and have been rarely used in Egypt, where the government crushed an insurgency by Islamic militants in the 1990s. Though the government of President Hosni Mubarak denies an Al Qaeda presence, Egypt does have a rising movement of Islamic hard-liners who, while they do not advocate violence, adhere to an ideology similar in other ways to Al Qaeda. There have been fears they could be further radicalized amid growing sectarian tensions between Egypt's Muslim majority and Christian minority. Nearly 1,000 Christians were attending the New Year's Mass at the Saints Church, said Father Mena Adel, a priest at the church. The service had just ended, and some worshippers were leaving the building when the bomb went off about a half hour after midnight, he said. "The last thing I heard was a powerful explosion and then my ears went deaf," Marco Boutros, a 17-year-old survivor, said from his hospital bed. "All I could see were body parts scattered all over — legs and bits of flesh." Blood splattered the facade of the church, as well as a mosque directly across the street. Bodies of many of the dead were collected from the street and kept inside the church overnight before they were taken away Saturday by ambulances for burial. Some Christians carried white sheets with the sign of the cross emblazoned on them with what appeared to be the blood of the victims. Health Ministry official Osama Abdel-Moneim said the death toll stood at 21, with 79 wounded. It was not immediately known if all the victims were Christians. It was the deadliest violence involving Christians in Egypt since at least 20 people, mostly Christians, were killed in sectarian clashes in a southern town in 1999. Mubarak vowed to track down those behind the attack, saying "we will cut off the hands of terrorists and those plotting against Egypt's security." "This terrorist act has shaken the conscience of the nation," he said in a statement, adding that "all Egypt was targeted, and terrorism does not distinguish between Copt and Muslim." The blast enraged Christians and stoked already strong sectarian tensions. Soon after the explosion, angry Christians clashed with police and Muslim residents, chanting, "With our blood and soul, we redeem the cross," witnesses said. Some broke in to the mosque across the street, throwing books into the street and sparking stone- and bottle-throwing clashes with Muslims, an AP photographer at the scene said. Police fired tear gas to break up the clashes. But tempers remained high: In the afternoon, hundreds of Christians remained massed inside the church and outside on the street, where they jostled with lines of riot police, chanted, and waved crosses and pictures of Jesus. In a reflection of the deepening mistrust between Egypt's communities, many in the crowd believed police would not fully investigate the bombing, reflecting Christians' suspicions that authorities overlook attacks on their community. Archbishop Arweis, the top Coptic cleric in Alexandria, said police want to blame a suicide bomber instead of a car bomb so they can write it off as a lone attacker. He denounced what he called a lack of protection. "There were only three soldiers and an officer in front of the church. Why did they have so little security at such a sensitive time when there's so many threats coming from al-Qaida?" he said, speaking to the AP. Police initially said the blast came from an explosives-packed vehicle parked about four meters (yards) from the church. But the Interior Ministry said later in a statement that there was no sign that the epicenter was a car. That "makes it likely that the explosives ... were carried on the person of a suicide attacker who died with the others," it said. Around six severely damaged vehicles remained outside the church, but there was little sign of a crater that major car bombs usually cause. Bits of flesh were stuck to nearby walls. Alexandria governor Adel Labib immediately blamed Al Qaeda, pointing to recent threats by the terror group to attack Christians in Egypt. He offered no evidence to support his claim, but a recent spate of attacks blamed on Al Qaeda against Christians in Iraq have an unusual connection to Egypt. Al Qaeda in Iraq says it is attacking Christians there in the name of two Egyptian Christian women who reportedly converted to Islam in order to get divorces, prohibited by the Orthodox Coptic Church. The women have since been secluded by the church, prompting Islamic hard-liners to hold frequent protests in past months, accusing the Church of imprisoning the women and forcing them to renounce Islam. Al Qaeda in Iraq says its attacks on Christians would continue until Egyptian Church officials release the two women. The Church denies holding the women against their will. Egypt faced a wave of Islamic militant violence in the 1990s, that peaked with a 1997 massacre of nearly 60 tourists at a pharoanic temple in Luxor. But the government suppressed the insurgency with a fierce crackdown, and militant violence all but stopped until a series of bomb attacks against tourist resorts in the Sinai Peninsula between 2004 and 2006. Those attacks in the resorts of Dahab, Taba and Sharm el-Sheikh, which included suicide bombers and killed a total of 125 people, were blamed by the government on local extremists in an attempt to deflect concerns that Al Qaeda had established a presence in Egypt. Egypt has seen a string of attacks on Christians in recent years, most notably, in January 2009, when seven Christians were killed in a drive-by shooting on a church in southern Egypt during celebrations for the Orthodox Coptic Christmas. Christians, mainly Orthodox Copts, are believed to make up about 10 percent of Egypt's mainly Muslim population of nearly 80 million people, and they have grown increasingly vocal in complaints about discrimination. In November, hundreds of Christians rioted in the capital, Cairo, smashing cars and windows after police violently stopped the construction of a church. The rare outbreak of Christian unrest in the capital left one person dead. source
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Iraqi and Egyptian Christians Killings
Bomb Hits Egypt Church at New Year's Mass, 21 Dead Published January 01, 2011 Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2010/12/31/explosion-hits-egypt-church-injuries-reported/#ixzz1AMgKiSjH ALEXANDRIA, Egypt – A powerful bomb, possibly from a homicide attacker, exploded in front of a Coptic Christian church as a crowd of worshippers emerged from a New Years Mass early Saturday, killing at least 21 people and wounding nearly 80 in an attack that raised suspicions of an Al Qaeda role. The attack came in the wake of repeated threats by Al Qaeda militants in Iraq to attack Egypt's Christians. A direct Al Qaeda hand in the bombing would be a dramatic development, as Egypt's government has long denied that the terror network has a significant presence in the country. Al Qaeda in Iraq has already been waging a campaign of violence against Christians in that country. Police initially said the blast came from an explosives-packed car parked outside the Saints Church in the Mediterranean port city. But the Interior Ministry later said it was more likely from a bomber who blew himself up among the crowd. Both tactics are hallmarks of Al Qaeda and have been rarely used in Egypt, where the government crushed an insurgency by Islamic militants in the 1990s. Though the government of President Hosni Mubarak denies an Al Qaeda presence, Egypt does have a rising movement of Islamic hard-liners who, while they do not advocate violence, adhere to an ideology similar in other ways to Al Qaeda. There have been fears they could be further radicalized amid growing sectarian tensions between Egypt's Muslim majority and Christian minority. Nearly 1,000 Christians were attending the New Year's Mass at the Saints Church, said Father Mena Adel, a priest at the church. The service had just ended, and some worshippers were leaving the building when the bomb went off about a half hour after midnight, he said. "The last thing I heard was a powerful explosion and then my ears went deaf," Marco Boutros, a 17-year-old survivor, said from his hospital bed. "All I could see were body parts scattered all over — legs and bits of flesh." Blood splattered the facade of the church, as well as a mosque directly across the street. Bodies of many of the dead were collected from the street and kept inside the church overnight before they were taken away Saturday by ambulances for burial. Some Christians carried white sheets with the sign of the cross emblazoned on them with what appeared to be the blood of the victims. Health Ministry official Osama Abdel-Moneim said the death toll stood at 21, with 79 wounded. It was not immediately known if all the victims were Christians. It was the deadliest violence involving Christians in Egypt since at least 20 people, mostly Christians, were killed in sectarian clashes in a southern town in 1999. Mubarak vowed to track down those behind the attack, saying "we will cut off the hands of terrorists and those plotting against Egypt's security." "This terrorist act has shaken the conscience of the nation," he said in a statement, adding that "all Egypt was targeted, and terrorism does not distinguish between Copt and Muslim." The blast enraged Christians and stoked already strong sectarian tensions. Soon after the explosion, angry Christians clashed with police and Muslim residents, chanting, "With our blood and soul, we redeem the cross," witnesses said. Some broke in to the mosque across the street, throwing books into the street and sparking stone- and bottle-throwing clashes with Muslims, an AP photographer at the scene said. Police fired tear gas to break up the clashes. But tempers remained high: In the afternoon, hundreds of Christians remained massed inside the church and outside on the street, where they jostled with lines of riot police, chanted, and waved crosses and pictures of Jesus. In a reflection of the deepening mistrust between Egypt's communities, many in the crowd believed police would not fully investigate the bombing, reflecting Christians' suspicions that authorities overlook attacks on their community. Archbishop Arweis, the top Coptic cleric in Alexandria, said police want to blame a suicide bomber instead of a car bomb so they can write it off as a lone attacker. He denounced what he called a lack of protection. "There were only three soldiers and an officer in front of the church. Why did they have so little security at such a sensitive time when there's so many threats coming from al-Qaida?" he said, speaking to the AP. Police initially said the blast came from an explosives-packed vehicle parked about four meters (yards) from the church. But the Interior Ministry said later in a statement that there was no sign that the epicenter was a car. That "makes it likely that the explosives ... were carried on the person of a suicide attacker who died with the others," it said. Around six severely damaged vehicles remained outside the church, but there was little sign of a crater that major car bombs usually cause. Bits of flesh were stuck to nearby walls. Alexandria governor Adel Labib immediately blamed Al Qaeda, pointing to recent threats by the terror group to attack Christians in Egypt. He offered no evidence to support his claim, but a recent spate of attacks blamed on Al Qaeda against Christians in Iraq have an unusual connection to Egypt. Al Qaeda in Iraq says it is attacking Christians there in the name of two Egyptian Christian women who reportedly converted to Islam in order to get divorces, prohibited by the Orthodox Coptic Church. The women have since been secluded by the church, prompting Islamic hard-liners to hold frequent protests in past months, accusing the Church of imprisoning the women and forcing them to renounce Islam. Al Qaeda in Iraq says its attacks on Christians would continue until Egyptian Church officials release the two women. The Church denies holding the women against their will. Egypt faced a wave of Islamic militant violence in the 1990s, that peaked with a 1997 massacre of nearly 60 tourists at a pharoanic temple in Luxor. But the government suppressed the insurgency with a fierce crackdown, and militant violence all but stopped until a series of bomb attacks against tourist resorts in the Sinai Peninsula between 2004 and 2006. Those attacks in the resorts of Dahab, Taba and Sharm el-Sheikh, which included suicide bombers and killed a total of 125 people, were blamed by the government on local extremists in an attempt to deflect concerns that Al Qaeda had established a presence in Egypt. Egypt has seen a string of attacks on Christians in recent years, most notably, in January 2009, when seven Christians were killed in a drive-by shooting on a church in southern Egypt during celebrations for the Orthodox Coptic Christmas. Christians, mainly Orthodox Copts, are believed to make up about 10 percent of Egypt's mainly Muslim population of nearly 80 million people, and they have grown increasingly vocal in complaints about discrimination. In November, hundreds of Christians rioted in the capital, Cairo, smashing cars and windows after police violently stopped the construction of a church. The rare outbreak of Christian unrest in the capital left one person dead. source
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VOTE CHRIS FOR THE NME AWARDS 2011.
^Muse fans are so persistent:laugh3::laugh3:
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VOTE CHRIS FOR THE NME AWARDS 2011.
team Maffoo:awesome: he's down to 3 again:disappointed: but Dom is winning:blush: i love your avi:laugh3:
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Lebanese Coldplay fans?!
:laugh3::laugh3: ana ma jarrabet 2o2rya:P DEYIM DEYIM Micha:nice: w Eman ma ba3rif 2eza bet3aiidy bass deyim deyim 2elik kamen:nice: ma b7eb l nbid, ta3mit l acool bet2arrif:P
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Lebanese Coldplay fans?!
^:laugh3::laugh3: oh Tammi:lol: you could translate what were saying to standard arabic if you post them here :shrug: @Micha wein el 3adel bel dene? eh? la vendredi ente w ne7na 2elna kell jem3a mnetchar7at 3al tari2:angry: la2 3am bemza7:P bonne chance akid betla772e:hug: EDIT: w yi Micha baddo yo2ta3 l masi7 ba3ed chway w yerka3o l chjar w n2oul "DEYM DEYM":awesome: ken lezim nrou7 3al knise n2addis l layle:shame:
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How do you sleep?
I sleep on my right side in a tiny bed all alone, i don't fall asleep easily i'm usually in bed for about 2 hours before i'm asleep and wake up a lot during the night, i used to share a room with my sister but i had to move to another room because i sleep with the lights on (i read a lot before bed and i'm too lazy to go turn them off:P), i only listen to music if i'm having trouble sleeping, and this is silly but i can't fall asleep if i'm wearing socks:shrug::embarrassed:
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Lebanese Coldplay fans?!
:laugh3: btetkheyale 2addeich mnestelemoun:laugh3: bass l 2a7ad 2eja wa7ad men l s3oudiyeh 2alle 2ennou houwwe lebnene w 7eke meteelna kell l wa2et bel 2ekhir ya3melle: "ya3tike l 3afye, ana men l s3oudiyee" ana sattalet:shocked2: w rje3et fa2a3et de7ek:lol: stalamne:laugh3: allah ba3ato:P merci ktir micha:cry: ma z3eelet:disappointed: :P
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Lebanese Coldplay fans?!
hi Eman, merci ktir yen3ad 3layke ente kamen:nice: 2allah ykhallilk 2ahlik:heart: ana rje3et 3al jem3a men l tanein:disappointed: w 3ende che8el la fo2 rase:bigcry: ente kamen bel jem3a? chou 3am ta3emle?
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Lebanese Coldplay fans?!
:laugh3::laugh3: 2eh mech lekchinoun:P ya waile chou mnsetelemoun lal souwe7:lol: m2elloun 2enno l camerats taba3 l security bi3youn l tmesil:lol: w mn2allif khbar 3an l chakhsiet w bisad2ouwoun, 2arrarna men 2awwal l sayfiyye 2enno n2oulloun 2ennou Einstein bass ken yet7ammam 2 fois bel sene:P 3atoul 3atoul 3atoul mn2oula w l3alam l mhebil bisadd2o:o mech 3am bemza7:laugh3: waina Eman?:confused:
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Lebanese Coldplay fans?!
khayy chaklil nbasatte:D bonne annee:heart: ana b2it bel beit bass tsallayna ktir:D, ken 3ende che8el lyom keno kelloun ba3doun ghefyn men l sahra:laugh3: saro l souwe7 day3in mech 3erfin men wein baddoun yrou7po w ma 7ada m3abbaroun:laugh3::laugh3:
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Lebanese Coldplay fans?!
rje3et men l che8el YEN3AD 3LAYKOUN:awesome::dance: 3emlin chi llayle?:D
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Iraqi and Egyptian Christians Killings
Gunmen Target Christian Homes in Iraq, 1 Killed Published December 30, 2010 BAGHDAD -- Iraqi officials say gunmen hurled grenades at the homes of two Christian families in Baghdad, killing at least one person. Police said in one attack, assailants in southwestern Baghdad Thursday threw two grenades inside the home of a Christian family, killing one person and injuring another four. In a different neighborhood in eastern Baghdad, militants threw a grenade inside another Christian home. Two people were injured in that attack. The twin attacks are sure to ratchet up tension among the tiny Christian community still living in Baghdad. At least 68 people were killed in October when militants stormed a Baghdad church during Mass and took the congregation hostage. Thousands of Iraqi Christians have fled to northern Iraq, fearing further attacks. source
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Lebanese Coldplay fans?!
eh nchalla:D zeh2ene:(
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Lebanese Coldplay fans?!
eh ma heik, w 2aslan keno l matareit b kell europa anja2 3am yemcho bisab l talej, ye3ne akid sar fi delay bass ba3den byousalo:D
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Lebanese Coldplay fans?!
ana jiitt :D hi Micha:hug:, hi Eman:heart: eh ba3rif, ana kamen ba3ed ma wosollechi bass boukra byejo ma tkhafe, senet l made t2akharro w rej3o woslo:wink: w yalle ba3attoun ba3ed ma 3refet chi 3announ:sick:
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Lebanese Coldplay fans?!
ana bkhabbrik chi:D lyom kenit okhte bel che8el w ba3attela message 7atteit fi quote l Homer Simpson:P 2aletle enno faratit de7ek bass 2oryote, w 2eja 3alam, emit hiyye w ma3oun tzakkarit l message w rej3it faratit de7ek:laugh3::laugh3: saro yed7ako ma3a metel l heblen w mech 3erfin chou fi:lol: ana ra7 nem, bonne nuit:heart: