somalia have no heroes-past or present.
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- SomaliNet Super
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somalia have no heroes-past or present.
from abdullah hasan to current somali leaders, they all tribal warlords. somalia is a country without heroes, and is a wasted death-trap country. death, death, and more deaths. somalia is a country populated by subhuman savages.
- MJ-Pride
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Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
Ok, go ahead and tell us a Yemeni Hero? Ali Abdallah Saleh? Or better yet Tell us a shaanshi hero? does eedo saliima qualify as a hero, considering that she use to cook halwa and macmacaan to us back in hamar 

- michael_ital
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Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
You still here ? Turn out the lights when you leave, please. Thanks. 

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Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
[quote="MJ-Pride"]Ok, go ahead and tell us a Yemeni Hero? Ali Abdallah Saleh? Or better yet Tell us a shaanshi hero? does eedo saliima qualify as a hero, considering that she use to cook halwa and macmacaan to us back in hamar
[/quote]
^^^
go and eat each other. foking nomadic lamagodley savages, or swim to yemen to become a maid.

^^^
go and eat each other. foking nomadic lamagodley savages, or swim to yemen to become a maid.
- Asraa
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Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
stop spliffin b
- michael_ital
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Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
who's the hotty in your avatar, g?
- Asraa
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Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
disssssssssssrespect never refer 2 me as g thats like calling me naya n its alicia keys peace up a town down im out 1
- michael_ital
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Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
LooooooooooooooL What a cute kid! 

Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
Somalia has many many heroes but none as heroic than these nobles.
http://www.allceeldheer.com/images/t5.jpg
from left to right: General Salad Gabeyre, Aden Cadde, Afrax Kulmiye and General Da'uud.
All Mudulood/Abgaal.
My other heroes include Xawo Taako, Ali SHarmaake, C/Ciise, Ali Mahdi, Mohamed Dheere, El-Xaji M. Suudi, Sh. Shariif, Naasib Buunto (anti-slavery Bantu leader who was dubbed by Italian media as "The Black Sparta), the ruler of Xamar when Ibn Batuta visted Abokar Cumar and one of the exraordinary abgaal kings of all time King Yacquub who when he was dispensing Justice and Fair rule in Shingaani Xamar Thomas Jefferson was still struggling to free America from the British. I think there should be national monument for him. Plus many more. There are so many, we're literally spoiled for choices.
http://www.allceeldheer.com/images/t5.jpg
from left to right: General Salad Gabeyre, Aden Cadde, Afrax Kulmiye and General Da'uud.
All Mudulood/Abgaal.
My other heroes include Xawo Taako, Ali SHarmaake, C/Ciise, Ali Mahdi, Mohamed Dheere, El-Xaji M. Suudi, Sh. Shariif, Naasib Buunto (anti-slavery Bantu leader who was dubbed by Italian media as "The Black Sparta), the ruler of Xamar when Ibn Batuta visted Abokar Cumar and one of the exraordinary abgaal kings of all time King Yacquub who when he was dispensing Justice and Fair rule in Shingaani Xamar Thomas Jefferson was still struggling to free America from the British. I think there should be national monument for him. Plus many more. There are so many, we're literally spoiled for choices.
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Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
[quote="NoAngst."]Somalia has many many heroes but none as heroic than these nobles.
http://www.allceeldheer.com/images/t5.jpg
from left to right: General Salad Gabeyre, Aden Cadde, Afrax Kulmiye and General Da'uud.
All Mudulood/Abgaal.
My other heroes include Xawo Taako, Ali SHarmaake, C/Ciise, Ali Mahdi, Mohamed Dheere, El-Xaji M. Suudi, Sh. Shariif, Naasib Buunto (anti-slavery Bantu leader who was dubbed by Italian media as "The Black Sparta), the ruler of Xamar when Ibn Batuta visted Abokar Cumar and one of the exraordinary abgaal kings of all time King Yacquub who when he was dispensing Justice and Fair rule in Shingaani Xamar Thomas Jefferson was still struggling to free America from the British. I think there should be national monument for him. Plus many more. There are so many, we're literally spoiled for choices.[/quote]
^^^
you are mixing sand and cakes. these are abgal heroes plus other tribal leaders, and mythological figures like xawo tako who are not real figures. when ibn batuta visited hamar, most abgals and lamagodley somalis lived the other side of the walls of hamar.
http://www.allceeldheer.com/images/t5.jpg
from left to right: General Salad Gabeyre, Aden Cadde, Afrax Kulmiye and General Da'uud.
All Mudulood/Abgaal.
My other heroes include Xawo Taako, Ali SHarmaake, C/Ciise, Ali Mahdi, Mohamed Dheere, El-Xaji M. Suudi, Sh. Shariif, Naasib Buunto (anti-slavery Bantu leader who was dubbed by Italian media as "The Black Sparta), the ruler of Xamar when Ibn Batuta visted Abokar Cumar and one of the exraordinary abgaal kings of all time King Yacquub who when he was dispensing Justice and Fair rule in Shingaani Xamar Thomas Jefferson was still struggling to free America from the British. I think there should be national monument for him. Plus many more. There are so many, we're literally spoiled for choices.[/quote]
^^^
you are mixing sand and cakes. these are abgal heroes plus other tribal leaders, and mythological figures like xawo tako who are not real figures. when ibn batuta visited hamar, most abgals and lamagodley somalis lived the other side of the walls of hamar.
Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
dp
Last edited by NoAngst. on Mon Apr 23, 2007 10:13 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
[quote="musika man"][quote="NoAngst."]you are mixing sand and cakes. these are abgal heroes plus other tribal leaders, and mythological figures like xawo tako who are not real figures. /quote]
Excuse me? How is 1st president of the Somali republic tribal hero? HOw about the anti-slavery bantu leader Nassib Buunto?
"when ibn batuta visited hamar, most abgals and lamagodley somalis lived the other side of the walls of hamar."
There were no walls back then. The wall was during colonial times built and enforced by the italians with dhabodhilifs arabs hiding behind it.
Ibn Battuta said Xamar had Berber (somali) leader who spoke Berber (somali). When the Porteguese were shelling Xamar in 1500s they recorded that Xamar was exceedingly large city inhabited by black people and the city was defended by black man. No arabs!
When 1991 rolled all arabs of Xamar reclaimed their heritage by fleeing to Yemen and Oman and UAE.
Excuse me? How is 1st president of the Somali republic tribal hero? HOw about the anti-slavery bantu leader Nassib Buunto?
"when ibn batuta visited hamar, most abgals and lamagodley somalis lived the other side of the walls of hamar."
There were no walls back then. The wall was during colonial times built and enforced by the italians with dhabodhilifs arabs hiding behind it.
Ibn Battuta said Xamar had Berber (somali) leader who spoke Berber (somali). When the Porteguese were shelling Xamar in 1500s they recorded that Xamar was exceedingly large city inhabited by black people and the city was defended by black man. No arabs!

Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
I hate it when non-muslims come here with thier af-bullshidh... 

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- SomaliNet Super
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Re: somalia have no heroes-past or present.
[quote="Solace*"]I hate it when non-muslims come here with thier af-bullshidh...
[/quote]
^^
who are the non-muslims? somali lamagodley nomads who worship qawiil=tribe? who is your god? darod, isak or hawiye?
angst what the hell are you talking about? somali nomad lamagodleys foked camels and married them at that time. they were like savages from the stone age. a bit of history. i will be back to explain to you.
Islam reached peacefully East Africa during the seventh century, and by the tenth century it became a dominant religion in Ethiopia, Somalia and the East African islands of Zanzibar, Pemba, Kilwa, Mafia, Pate, Lamu and Mombasa. During the later Middle Ages, i.e. in those crucial three hundred years that appear to have been the formative period of a number of towns and nations along the Indian Ocean shores, the Arabs and Persians spun a network of Moslem connection across the waters in all directions. Ibn Battuta during his visit in 1331 observes that Arabic was already the common literary and the commercial language spoken all over these coastal islands.
Ibn Battuta was extremely marveled at the splendor of Muqdisho. It is ruled by a Sultan. It undertakes much commerce of different merchandise and many ships arrive here from the big Kingdom of Cambaya, bringing large quantities of clothes of different types and different goods and spices. And again in the 18th century, Sultan Sayed bin – Said of Oman calls it "the most brilliant of all the princesses of Arabia". Muqdisho known as Hamar by the native founding Rer Hamar people, emerged through the centuries as the cultural and religious center of the Banaadiri Coast. This prosperous trade was rudely interrupted by the arrival of the Portuguese who came round from the other side of Africa, suddenly and unpredictably with bigger and faster ships and better guns. Within thirteen years, by 1511, the Portuguese had made themselves masters of the Indian Ocean. More than ever before, the Indian Ocean became a link, a unifier of cultures.
The Banaadirs (also spelled "Benadir") are people with their roots in ancient Arabia, Persia and South and Central Asia. Their name is derived from a Persian word "bandar" which means "harbor" or port, reflecting their origins as sea-faring traders who crossed the Indian Ocean to the easternmost part of Africa and established centers of commerce which linked that continent with Asia. The first Banaadir communities were established in what is today southern Soomaaliya about one thousand years ago. Their reputation as the settlements of a prosperous and peace loving people was set down in written accounts by foreign travelers to Afrika dating back to the 13th century.
"The Banaadir Coast" as proper name for coastal northeast Afrika was used well into 20th century, and as an informal designation for southern Somalia remains in use today. Being the first to live in this region – nomalid "Samale" (Somali) people from the African interior did not press south and east to the Indian Ocean until centuries later. The Banaadir port city of Hamar eventually became Muqdisho, Somalia's capital. The Banaadir continued to live their ancient stones homes of their forebears built in Mogadisho's old quarter. Although there has been intermarriage and influence from African peoples over the centuries, the Banaadir today very much remain a light and few dark skinned minority whose economic livelihood, unlike most of Somali people, is based on commerce and not agriculture.

^^
who are the non-muslims? somali lamagodley nomads who worship qawiil=tribe? who is your god? darod, isak or hawiye?
angst what the hell are you talking about? somali nomad lamagodleys foked camels and married them at that time. they were like savages from the stone age. a bit of history. i will be back to explain to you.
Islam reached peacefully East Africa during the seventh century, and by the tenth century it became a dominant religion in Ethiopia, Somalia and the East African islands of Zanzibar, Pemba, Kilwa, Mafia, Pate, Lamu and Mombasa. During the later Middle Ages, i.e. in those crucial three hundred years that appear to have been the formative period of a number of towns and nations along the Indian Ocean shores, the Arabs and Persians spun a network of Moslem connection across the waters in all directions. Ibn Battuta during his visit in 1331 observes that Arabic was already the common literary and the commercial language spoken all over these coastal islands.
Ibn Battuta was extremely marveled at the splendor of Muqdisho. It is ruled by a Sultan. It undertakes much commerce of different merchandise and many ships arrive here from the big Kingdom of Cambaya, bringing large quantities of clothes of different types and different goods and spices. And again in the 18th century, Sultan Sayed bin – Said of Oman calls it "the most brilliant of all the princesses of Arabia". Muqdisho known as Hamar by the native founding Rer Hamar people, emerged through the centuries as the cultural and religious center of the Banaadiri Coast. This prosperous trade was rudely interrupted by the arrival of the Portuguese who came round from the other side of Africa, suddenly and unpredictably with bigger and faster ships and better guns. Within thirteen years, by 1511, the Portuguese had made themselves masters of the Indian Ocean. More than ever before, the Indian Ocean became a link, a unifier of cultures.
The Banaadirs (also spelled "Benadir") are people with their roots in ancient Arabia, Persia and South and Central Asia. Their name is derived from a Persian word "bandar" which means "harbor" or port, reflecting their origins as sea-faring traders who crossed the Indian Ocean to the easternmost part of Africa and established centers of commerce which linked that continent with Asia. The first Banaadir communities were established in what is today southern Soomaaliya about one thousand years ago. Their reputation as the settlements of a prosperous and peace loving people was set down in written accounts by foreign travelers to Afrika dating back to the 13th century.
"The Banaadir Coast" as proper name for coastal northeast Afrika was used well into 20th century, and as an informal designation for southern Somalia remains in use today. Being the first to live in this region – nomalid "Samale" (Somali) people from the African interior did not press south and east to the Indian Ocean until centuries later. The Banaadir port city of Hamar eventually became Muqdisho, Somalia's capital. The Banaadir continued to live their ancient stones homes of their forebears built in Mogadisho's old quarter. Although there has been intermarriage and influence from African peoples over the centuries, the Banaadir today very much remain a light and few dark skinned minority whose economic livelihood, unlike most of Somali people, is based on commerce and not agriculture.
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