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Fady A. Rizk was born in Lebanon in 1963, where his family owned and operated a private hospital. On April 13, 1975, everything changed—a bloody and harrowing civil war began that would last fifteen years, claiming the lives of 150,000 and leaving the country in ruins. Faced with the prospect of his country’s destruction, Fady made a fateful decision that would alter the course of his life. But that wouldn’t be Fady’s only fight for survival. He moved to America to pursue a better life and an education at Syracuse Universit.He went on to meet the love of his life at his first job in NYC and started a family of his own. After talking his way onto the Wall Street trading floors, he end...
Arab Americans in Toledo is a collection of essays, interviews, profiles, and pictures that explores one of Toledo's most diverse ethnic groups. Its members both Christian and Muslim, and from many nationalities have come together to form a vibrant and important local community. The book's chapters are equally diverse, covering language, food, religion, history, and culture, as well as stories of those whose lives have enriched Northwest Ohio since the first Arab immigrants arrived in the early 1880s."
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“Bitcoin is the most important financial innovation of the last century. It has already created tens of thousands of millionaires and will likely create many more. Anthony is one of the first Wall Street titans to understand the potential of this technology to revolutionize financial markets.” —Sarah Kunst, Founder and General Partner, Cleo Capital “Bitcoin is the most important innovation to money in 1000 years and for the first time in history we get to observe the process of monetization of an economic good in real time…” —Vijay Boyapati, Co-Founder The Dealmix The headlines about Bitcoin change daily, if not hourly. One day, Elon Musk endorses them but later says he won’t...
In 1994, Jeanne Celestine, a young Rwandan schoolgirl, was living a quiet life in the countryside when the death of Rwanda's president provoked a one-hundred-day extermination of over one million ethnic Tutsis. She survived by hiding from violent militiamen all the while caring for her three-year-old twin sisters, Teddy and Teta. This heartbreaking narrative reveals the mind of an innocent child who, in the face of humanity's most hideous act, not only managed to preserve her life and the lives of her sisters but also to restore her voice in the wake of its immense darkness.
David is learning to live one step in front of the enemy!We can learn from this text that when God will sometimes let the enemy pursue you even when God has a plan for your life! We can learn today that just because He allows the enemy permission to pursue doesn't mean He gives him access to harm you! Its possible to live your life one step ahead of the enemy.
In this riveting account of U.S.-Arab relations, award-winning author Ussama Makdisi explores why Arabs once had a favorable view of America and why they no longer do. Firmly rejecting the spurious notion of a civilizational clash between Islam and the West, Makdisi instead demonstrates how an initial zealous American missionary crusade was transformed across the nineteenth-century into a leading American educational presence in the Arab world, and how the advent of the idea of Wilsonian self-determination, amidst wide-scale Arab emigration to the United States, further bolstered a positive, foundational Arab idea of America. However, a series of subsequent political turning points-beginning...
Eighth in a series of annual reports comparing business regulations in 183 economies, Doing Business 2011 measures regulations affecting 10 areas of everyday business activity: starting a business, dealing with construction permits, employing workers, registering property, getting credit, protecting investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts, and closing a business. The report updates all 10 sets of indicators, ranks countries on their overall ease of doing business and analyzes reforms to business regulation- identifying which countries are improving strengthening their business environment the most and which ones slipped. Doing Business 2011 includes results on the ongoing research in the area of "getting electricity" and illustrates how reforms in business regulations can translate into better outcomes for domestic entrepreneurs and the wider economy. It also focuses on how women in particular are affected by complex business regulations.
A reissue of Randal's widely acclaimed 1983 study of the right-wing Christian militias in Lebanon, that in 1975 launched a bloody bid for power that plunged the country into a decades-long cycle of war and civil conflict. For this 2012 reissue, he has added a piercing new Preface that reflects on the meaning of those events, both then and today.