Personal information | |||
---|---|---|---|
Full name | Adel Sarshar Kherghi | ||
Date of birth | January 3, 1992 | ||
Place of birth | Iran | ||
Position(s) | Defender | ||
Team information | |||
Current team | Gostaresh Foolad | ||
Number | 12 | ||
Senior career* | |||
Years | Team | Apps | (Gls) |
2013–2014 | Aboomoslem | 14 | (3) |
2014– | Gostaresh Foolad | 7 | (0) |
*Club domestic league appearances and goals, correct as of 9 April 2015 |
Adel Sarshar is an Iranian football defender who since 2014 has played for the Iranian football club Gostaresh Foolad in the Iran Pro League. [1]
Homa may refer to:
Sulayman Hayyim, was an Iranian lexicographer, translator, playwright and essayist, often called "Iran's Father of the bilingual dictionary".
Siamak Shayeghi was an Iranian film director and film producer.
Persian embroidery is a type of Persian art and handicraft.
Ratan Nath Dhar Sarshar was an Indian Urdu novelist, columnist and editor from British India. Born into a Kashmiri Brahmin family which settled in Lucknow, he received his education at Canning College and later took up employment as a schoolteacher. In August 1878, he was appointed editor of the Lucknow-based newspaper Avadh Akhbar, in which his most famous work Fasana-e-Azad was published serially.
Janet Cohansedgh was an Iranian athlete who died at the height of her career. She was a national champion and holder of a number of records in the early and mid-1960s.
Soleyman Binafard is a former Iranian sport wrestler who is the only Jew in Iran to join its national wrestling team.
The Tenants is a 1987 Persian comedy film directed by Dariush Mehrjui. It has been widely acclaimed as the best Iranian comedy film of the 1980s.
Jalal Qanuni was a prominent Iranian musician and master of the Persian classical music and Dashtestani folkloric music.
Jadehay sard is a 1985 Iranian film by Massood Jafari Jozani. The film is based on the story "If Daddy Dies" by Reza Sarshar. In 1987 it became one of the first Iranian films to receive international attention when it premiered at the 37th Berlin International Film Festival.
The Noor Iranian Film Festival is an annual film festival held in Los Angeles, California, founded by cultural producer Siamak Ghahremani and co-founder Anthony Azizi in 2007. The festival's namesake comes from the word Nur, also spelled Noor, meaning to shed light or "noor," on Iranian culture and heritage through Iranian cinema. A non-profit, non-religious, and non-political organization, the Noor Iranian Film Festival (NIFF) was created to shed light, or ‘noor,’ on Persian culture, helping to express the beauty of a culture that is commonly misperceived due to its portrayal in the media. Additional to the main annual festival in Los Angeles, a tour of the program has made several return trips to cities such as Daytona Beach, San Diego, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington D.C.
That Which That Orphan Saw is a novel by Iranian author Mohammad Reza Sarshar about the life of Mohammad, the prophet of Islam. Sarshar has attempted to describe the tumultuous and unique life of Mohammad in the novel. Muslims believe that Mohammad was the last prophet and the most complete human being. That Which That Orphan Saw has received numerous awards and has been reprinted many times in Iran. The idea for writing the novel came to Sarshar in 1980 because he believed that there were no valuable life stories about Mohammad available for teenagers. The 8th reprinting was published in May 2013.
Homa Sarshar is an Iranian-American author, activist, media personality, and award-winning journalist. She was a columnist for Zan-e-Ruz magazine and the Kayhan daily newspaper between 1964 and 1978.
Shaban Jafari, often known as Shaban the Brainless or Shaban the Crown-Bestower, was a political activist and practitioner of varzesh-e bastani. A controversial figure in Iranian politics, he was instrumental in overthrowing Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh's government in the 1953 Iranian coup d'état.
Shamsi Hekmat or Šamsi Morādpur Hekmat was an Iranian woman who pioneered reforms in women's status in Iran. She founded the first Iranian Jewish women's organization in 1947. She migrated to the United States and established the Iranian Jewish Women's Organization of Southern California to help poor families and students.
Azure Party, nicknamed Iranian Nazi Party and the "Black Shirts" was a fascist party in Iran with Germanophile and pro-Nazi Germany tendencies.
Fasana-e-Azad is an Urdu novel by Ratan Nath Dhar Sarshar. It was serialized in Avadh Akhbar between 1878 and 1883 before it was published in four large volumes by the Nawal Kishore Press. The story follows a wandering character named Azad and his companion, Khoji, from the streets of late-nineteenth-century Lucknow to the battlefields of the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) in Constantinople and Russia. The work's status as a novel has been debated, but it is thought by most scholars to be one of the first novels in Urdu.
Jahan Pahlavan was a rank champion in the Iranian Guards before the Battle of al-Qadisiyyah.
Shalom was the first Jewish newspaper published in Iran. Launched in Iran's capital Tehran in 1915, it was founded by Mordechai Ben Avraham (1888-1964). Its chief editor was Mordechai's brother, Asher (1890-1963). The first issue was specifically chosen to be published on Nowruz, the day of the Iranian New Year. The estalishment of the newspaper was made possible through the Persian Constitutional Revolution. The newspaper was written in Judeo-Persian.