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Ammo Baba

Index Ammo Baba

Emmanuel Baba Dawud better known as Ammo Baba (Arabic: عمو بابا, ܥܡܘ ܒܒܐ) (born 27 November 1934 in Baghdad, Iraq – 27 May 2009 in Dohuk, Iraq), was an Iraqi football player and coach of the Iraq national football team. [1]

51 relations: Adnan Hamad, Al-Athori SC, Al-Karkh SC, Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya, Al-Rasheed SC, Al-Shorta SC, Al-Talaba SC, Alaa Ahmad, Alaa Ali Mhawi, Ali Adnan Kadhim, Ali Faez, Ali Mohsen, Assyrians in Iraq, Bashar Resan, Christianity in the Middle East, Deaths in May 2009, Douglas Aziz, Football at the 1957 Pan Arab Games, Football at the 1960 Summer Olympics – Men's qualification, Football at the 1965 Pan Arab Games, Football at the 1978 Asian Games – Squads, Football at the 1984 Summer Olympics – Men's team squads, Football at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Group B, Football at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Men's team squads, Ghanim Oraibi, Haki, Iran, Hussein Ali Al-Saedi, Hussein Saeed, Iraq at the 1988 Summer Olympics, Iraq FA Cup, Iraq national football team, Iraqi Central League, Iraqi Premier League, Ismail Mohammed (football coach), Jamil Abbas, List of ethnic Assyrians/Chaldeans/Syriacs, List of first association football internationals per country: 1940–1962, List of Iraq national football team managers, List of Iraqis, Mikhael K. Pius, Mohanad Ali, Nashat Akram, November 1934, November 27, Qatar SC, Safaa Hadi, Younis Abed Ali, 1934, 1993 Japan v Iraq football match, 2009 in association football, ..., 2009 in Iraq. Expand index (1 more) »

Adnan Hamad

Adnan Hamad Majid Al-Abbassi (born February 1, 1961) is an Iraqi football manager and former player.

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Al-Athori SC

Al-Athori Sports Club or Nadi Athori (lit), is an Iraqi football club based in Baghdad that was founded in 1955.

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Al-Karkh SC

Al-Karkh Sports Club (نادي الكرخ الرياضي) is an Iraqi sports club based in Karkh, Baghdad.

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Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya

Nadi Al-Quwa Al-Jawiya Al-Riyadhi (lit) is an Iraqi football club based in Rusafa District, Baghdad that competes in the Iraqi Premier League, the top-flight of Iraqi football.

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Al-Rasheed SC

Al-Rasheed Sports Club (نادي الرشيد الرياضي) was an Iraqi sports club based in Karkh, Baghdad.

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Al-Shorta SC

Al-Shorta Sports Club (lit) is an Iraqi sports club based in Rusafa District, East Districts of the Tigris River, Baghdad.

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Al-Talaba SC

Al-Talaba Sports Club (lit) is an Iraqi sports club based in Al-Rusafa, Baghdad.

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Alaa Ahmad

Alaa Ahmed ('''علاء أحمد'''.), (born in January 1, 1952 in Basra), is an Iraqi former footballer, he played as a Midfielder and spent the majority of his career with Al-Minaa club.

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Alaa Ali Mhawi

Alaa Ali Mhawi (علاء علي مهاوي, born 3 June 1996) known as Alaa Mhawi, is a professional footballer who plays for Al-Shorta in Iraqi Premier League and the Iraqi national team as a right back.

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Ali Adnan Kadhim

Ali Adnan (Arabic: علي عدنان; born December 19, 1993 in Baghdad, Iraq), is an Iraqi professional footballer who plays as a left back for Italian club Udinese and for the Iraqi national team.

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Ali Faez

Ali Faez Atiyah (علي فائز عطية; born 9 September 1994 in Baghdad, Iraq) is an Iraqi football defender and an Olympian who plays for Al-Kharaitiyat and the Iraqi national team.

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Ali Mohsen

Ali Mohsen Al-Moraisi (علي محسن المريسي) (died 1994) was Yemen’s greatest football player, and the first to ply his trade in the Egyptian league with Arab giants Zamalek in the 1960s.

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Assyrians in Iraq

Assyrians in Iraq are an ethnoreligious and linguistic minority in present-day Iraq, and are the indigenous population of the region.

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Bashar Resan

Bashar Resan (بشار رسن; born 22 December 1996 in Baghdad, Iraq) is an Iraqi footballer who plays as Midfielder for Persepolis in the Persian Gulf Pro League and the Iraqi national team.

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Christianity in the Middle East

Christianity, which originated in the Middle East in the 1st century AD, is a significant minority religion of the region. Christianity in the Middle East is characterized by the diversity of its beliefs and traditions, compared to other parts of the Old World. Christians now make up approximately 5% of the Middle Eastern population, down from 20% in the early 20th century. Cyprus is the only Christian Majority country in the Middle East, with the Christian percentage ranging between 76% and 78% of mainly Eastern Orthodox Christianity (i.e. most of the Greek population). Proportionally, Lebanon has the 2nd highest rate of Christians in the Middle East, with a percentage ranging between 39% and 41% of mainly Maronite Christians, followed by Egypt where Christians (especially Coptic Christians) and others account for about 11%. The largest Christian group in the Middle East is the previously Coptic speaking but today mostly Arabic-speaking Egyptian Copts, who number 15–20 million people, "estimates ranged from 6 to 11 million; 6% (official estimate) to 20% (Church estimate)" although Coptic sources claim the figure is closer to 12–16 million. "In 2008, Pope Shenouda III and Bishop Morkos, bishop of Shubra, declared that the number of Copts in Egypt is more than 12 million." (Arabic) "In 2008, father Morkos Aziz the prominent priest in Cairo declared that the number of Copts (inside Egypt) exceeds 16 million." Copts reside mainly in Egypt, but also in Sudan and Libya, with tiny communities in Israel, Cyprus, Jordan, Lebanon, and Tunisia. The Eastern Aramaic speaking indigenous Assyrians of Iraq, southeastern Turkey, northwestern Iran and northeastern Syria, who number 2–3 million, have suffered both ethnic and religious persecution for many centuries, such as the Assyrian Genocide conducted by the Ottoman Turks and their allies, leading to many fleeing and congregating in areas in the north of Iraq and northeast of Syria. The great majority of Assyrians are followers of the Assyrian Church of the East, Chaldean Catholic Church, Syriac Orthodox Church, Ancient Church of the East, Assyrian Pentecostal Church and Assyrian Evangelical Church. In Iraq, the numbers of Assyrians has declined to between 300,000 and 500,000 (from 0.8 to 1.4 million before 2003 US invasion). Assyrian Christians were between 800,000 and 1.2 million before 2003. In 2014, the Assyrian population of the Nineveh Plains In Northern Iraq largely collapsed due to an Invasion by ISIS. But after the fall of ISIS the Assyrian population of the Nineveh Plainsis rreturning home. The next largest Christian group in the Middle East is the once Aramaic speaking but now Arabic-speaking Maronites who are Catholics and number some 1.1–1.2 million across the Middle East, mainly concentrated within Lebanon. Many Lebanese Christians avoid an Arabic ethnic identity in favour of a pre-Arab Phoenician-Canaanite heritage, to which most of the general Lebanese population originates from. In Israel, Israeli Maronites (Palestinians) together with smaller Aramaic-speaking Christian populations of Syriac Orthodox and Greek Catholic adherence are legally classified ethnically as either Arameans or Arabs per their choice. The Arab Christians mostly descended from Arab Christian tribes, from Arabized Greeks or are recent converts to Protestantism, and number about 5 million in the region. Most Arab Christians are adherents of the Eastern Orthodox Church. Roman Catholics of the Latin Rite are small in numbers and Protestants altogether number about 400,000. Most Arab Christian Catholics are originally non-Arab, with Melkites and Rum Christians descending from Arabized Greek-speaking Byzantine populations. They are members of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church, a Eastern Catholic Church. They number over 1 million in the Middle East. They came into existence as a result of a schism within the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch due to the election of a Patriarch in 1724. The Armenians number around 1 million in the Middle East, with their largest community in Iran with 200,000 members. The number of Armenians in Turkey is disputed having a wide range of estimations. More Armenian communities reside in Lebanon, Jordan and to lesser degree in other Middle Eastern countries such as Iraq, Israel and Egypt. The Armenian Genocide during and after World War I drastically reduced the once sizeable Armenian population. The Greeks who had once inhabited large parts of the western Middle East and Asia Minor, declined after of the Arab conquests, then the later Turkish conquests, and all but vanished from Turkey as a result of the Greek Genocide and expulsions which followed World War I. Today the biggest Middle Eastern Greek community resides in Cyprus and numbers around 793,000 (2008). Cypriot Greeks constitute the only Christian majority state in the Middle East, although Lebanon was founded with a Christian majority in the first half of the 20th century. In addition, some of the modern Arab Christians (especially Melkites) constitute Arabized Greco-Roman communities rather than ethnic Arabs. Smaller Christian groups include: Arameans, Georgians, Ossetians and Russians. There are currently several million Christian foreign workers in the Gulf area, mostly from the Philippines, India, Sri Lanka and Indonesia. In the Persian Gulf states, Bahrain has 1,000 Christian citizens and Kuwait has 400 native Christian citizens, in addition to 450,000 Christian foreign residents in Kuwait. Although the vast majority of Middle Eastern populations descend from Pre-Arab and Non-Arab peoples extant long before the 7th century AD Arab Islamic conquest, a 2015 study estimates there are also 483,500 Christian believers from a previously Muslim background in the Middle East, most of them being adherents of various Protestant churches. Converts to Christianity from other religions such as Islam, Yezidism, Mandeanism, Yarsan, Zoroastrianism, Bahaism, Druze, and Judaism exist in relatively small numbers amongst the Kurdish, Turks, Turcoman, Iranian, Azeri, Circassian, Israelis, Kawliya, Yezidis, Mandeans and Shabaks. Middle Eastern Christians are relatively wealthy, well educated, and politically moderate, as they have today an active role in social, economic, sporting and political spheres in their societies in the Middle East.

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Deaths in May 2009

The following is a list of deaths in May 2009.

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Douglas Aziz

Douglas Aziz Shamasha Eshaya (دوكلاص عزيز (born 1 January 1942) is a former Iraq national football player and caretaker coach. He is from Iraq's Christian minority, and an ethnic Assyrian. He was a pillar for club and country during the late 1960s and through the 1970s. He made his league debut in 1963 and spent 15 inspiring seasons with Aliyat Al-Shurta and with merger club Al-Shurta, where he was a key figure in the side along with Abid Kadhim, Majeed Ali, Latif Shandal and Riyadh Nouri. He became the first outfield player in the Iraqi League to play as a goalkeeper when he was forced to go in goal for the final few minutes of a 5-2 win over Al-Tijara after an injury to Raad Hammoudi. After making his international debut in 1967, Douglas quickly became a key influence as the midfield general in the heart of the Iraqi team. With the national team, he played in the 1974 World Cup qualifiers in Australia, where Iraq finished second behind the hosts, the 1972 and 1976 Asian Cups in Thailand and Iran, and in the Olympic qualifiers in 1968 and 1972. Douglas was also an important part of the Iraqi army team that won the 1972 and 1977 CISM World Military Championship. Douglas played for the Iraqi national team until 1978 and retired from playing a year later. He went on to coach at Al-Shurta and in his first season in charge, led the club to their first ever league title in 1979-1980. He continued to coach the club's youth teams after stepping down as head coach in 1983, but was renamed coach of the first team in 1985. In 1989, he stepped down as coach of Al-Shurta to work full-time as assistant to Under-19s coach Bill Asprey. Douglas was also assistant coach to Ammo Baba in the national team set-up from 1983–1984. He coached Al-Khutot, Salah-Al-Deen and Al-Karkh in the 1990s before leaving Iraq to settle in Arnhem, the Netherlands. Douglas is in the Al-Shorta Hall of Fame.

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Football at the 1957 Pan Arab Games

The 1957 Pan Arab Games football tournament was the 2nd edition of the Pan Arab Games men's football tournament.

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Football at the 1960 Summer Olympics – Men's qualification

The qualification for football tournament at the 1960 Summer Olympics.

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Football at the 1965 Pan Arab Games

The 1965 Pan Arab Games football tournament was the 4th edition of the Pan Arab Games men's football tournament.

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Football at the 1978 Asian Games – Squads

Squads for the Football at the 1978 Asian Games played in Bangkok, Thailand.

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Football at the 1984 Summer Olympics – Men's team squads

The following is a list of squads for each nation competing in men's football at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles.

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Football at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Group B

No description.

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Football at the 1988 Summer Olympics – Men's team squads

No description.

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Ghanim Oraibi

Ghanim Oraibi Jassim Al-Roubai (born 16 August 1961) is an Iraqi football defender who played for Iraq in the 1986 FIFA World Cup.

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Haki, Iran

Haki (حكي, also Romanized as Ḩakī) is a village in Targavar Rural District, Silvaneh District, Urmia County, West Azerbaijan Province, Iran.

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Hussein Ali Al-Saedi

Hussein Ali Jasim Al Saedi (حسين علي جاسم الساعدي, born 29 November 1996 in Baghdad), is an Iraqi professional footballer who plays for Qatar SC in the Qatar Stars League and the Iraqi national team.

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Hussein Saeed

Hussein Saeed Mohammed Al-Ubaidi (حسين سعيد محمد العبيدي, born 21 January 1958 in Al Adhamiya, Baghdad) is a retired Iraqi footballer who played as a forward for the Iraqi Premier League club Al-Talaba and the Iraqi national team and is a former president of the Iraq Football Association.

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Iraq at the 1988 Summer Olympics

Iraq competed at the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, South Korea.

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Iraq FA Cup

The Iraq FA Cup (Arabic: كأس العراق) is an annual knockout football competition in men's domestic Iraqi football.

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Iraq national football team

The Iraq national football team (المنتخب العراقي لكرة القدم) represents Iraq in international football.

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Iraqi Central League

The Iraqi Central League (Arabic: الدوري العراقي المركزي, Dawri Al-Markazi) was the top-level division of football in central Iraq between 1956 and 1974 and contained 15 teams in its final season.

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Iraqi Premier League

The Iraqi Premier League (Arabic: الدوري العراقي الممتاز, Dawri Al-Mumtaz) is the highest league in the league system of Iraqi football and currently contains the top 20 Iraqi football clubs.

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Ismail Mohammed (football coach)

Ismail Mohammed (born 1922 in Baghdad – January 2, 2008) was Iraq’s first national team coach who led the team at the 2nd Pan Arab Games in Beirut in 1957.

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Jamil Abbas

Jamil Abbas (Arabic: جميل عباس) was one of the longest serving national captains of Iraq.

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List of ethnic Assyrians/Chaldeans/Syriacs

The following is a list of notable ethnic Assyrians/.

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List of first association football internationals per country: 1940–1962

The following is a list of first official international association football matches for each (present or past) member of FIFA, played between 1940 and 1962.

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List of Iraq national football team managers

The team has had 71 coaches, of whom 51 have been from Iraq.

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List of Iraqis

This list of Iraqis includes people who were born in Iraq and people who are of Iraqi ancestry, who are significantly notable for their life and/or work.

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Mikhael K. Pius

Mikhael K. Pius (March 19, 1927 – January 9, 2011) was an author and Assyrian historian, principally on the Assyrian community on the old British Royal Air Force (RAF) base in Habbaniya, where the author had lived.

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Mohanad Ali

Mohanad Ali Kadhim (مهند علي, born 1 July 2000 in Iraq), commonly known as Mimi, is an Iraqi footballer who plays as a forward for Iraqi Premier League club Al-Shorta and the Iraq national team.

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Nashat Akram

Nashat Akram Abid Ali Al-Eissa (نشأت أكرم عبد علي العيسى), born 12 September 1984 in Al Hillah, Babylon, Iraq is a retired Iraqi professional footballer who was an Iraqi international.

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November 1934

The following events occurred in November 1934.

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November 27

No description.

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Qatar SC

Qatar Sports Club (نادي قطر الرياضي) is a sports club based in Doha, Qatar.

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Safaa Hadi

Safaa Hadi (صفاء هادي, born 10 July 1998)) is an Iraqi footballer who plays as a midfielder, who currently plays for Iraqi Premier League club Al-Zawraa and the Iraq national team.

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Younis Abed Ali

Younis Abed Ali ('''يونس عبد علي'''.)), (born 1964 in Al-Thawra, Baghdad) was an Iraqi former football forward who played for Iraq in the 1988 Summer Olympics in Seoul, 1988 Arab Nations Cup in Amman and 1989 Peace and Friendship Cup in Kuwait.

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1934

No description.

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1993 Japan v Iraq football match

During the qualification rounds for the 1994 FIFA World Cup, Japan and Iraq played to a 2–2 draw in Doha, Qatar.

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2009 in association football

The following are the association football events of the year 2009 throughout the world.

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2009 in Iraq

Events in the year 2009 in Iraq.

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Redirects here:

Ammu Baba, Emmanuel Baba Dawud.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammo_Baba

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